Nina Fedoroff

Image of Nina Fedoroff
Myths about the dire effects of genetically modified foods on health and the environment abound, but they have not held up to scientific scrutiny. And, although many concerns have been expressed about the potential for unexpected consequences, the unexpected effects that have been observed so far have been benign.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Health
Image of Nina Fedoroff
If there are more and more environmental refugees, they are going to end up on your doorstep too.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Environmental
Image of Nina Fedoroff
There's almost no food that isn't genetically modified. Genetic modification is the basis of all evolution. Things change because our planet is subjected to a lot of radiation, which causes DNA damage, which gets repaired, but results in mutations, which create a ready mixture of plants that people can choose from to improve agriculture.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Food
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We are sliding back into a dark era, and there seems little we can do about it. I am profoundly depressed at just how difficult it has become merely to get a realistic conversation started on issues such as climate change or genetically modified organisms.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Dark
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We wouldn't think of going to our doctor and saying 'Treat me the way doctors treated people in the 19th Century', and yet that's what we're demanding in food production.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Thinking
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We have six-and-a-half-billion people on the planet, going rapidly towards seven. We're going to need a lot of inventiveness about how we use water and grow crops.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: People
Image of Nina Fedoroff
There are probably already too many people on the planet.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: People
Image of Nina Fedoroff
New molecular methods that add or modify genes can protect plants from diseases and pests and improve crops in ways that are both more environmentally benign and beyond the capability of older methods.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Add
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We need to continue to decrease the growth rate of the global population; the planet can't support many more people.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: People
Image of Nina Fedoroff
The more we can grow on already cultivated land, the better.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Land
Image of Nina Fedoroff
In agriculture, people have taken wild plants that can't be eaten by people - and turned them into wonderful food sources. And that's because genomes can change, and people working with plants have picked mutations. Mutations are nothing more than genetic changes.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Taken
Image of Nina Fedoroff
Civilization depends on our expanding ability to produce food efficiently, which has markedly accelerated thanks to science and technology.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Technology
Image of Nina Fedoroff
The influence of a science adviser is only as good as ears open to that science advice.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Advice
Image of Nina Fedoroff
If everybody switched to organic farming, we couldn't support the earth's current population - maybe half.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Support
Image of Nina Fedoroff
One of the really remarkably beneficial aspects of genetic engineering is that much of the previous methodology for controlling pests and so forth is through chemicals that affect a very broad spectrum of insects, for example, or fungicides that control fungi.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Engineering
Image of Nina Fedoroff
Even as the population doubled from three to six billion, we managed to race ahead with all kinds of technological and scientific events in agriculture - from using more fertilizers to mechanization to advanced plant breeding.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Race
Image of Nina Fedoroff
For me science is not different from art, except in the one small, crucial detail that experiments speak their own truths, not ours.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Art
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We've gotten so good at growing food that we've gone, in a few generations, from nearly half of Americans living on farms to 2 percent. We no longer think about how the wonderful things in the grocery store got there, and we'd like to go back to what we think is a more natural way.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Thinking
Image of Nina Fedoroff
Weeds do become resistant to herbicides, and it needs to be managed with multiple herbicides.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Weed
Image of Nina Fedoroff
Jumping genes are fundamental because they're agents of change. Everybody knows that organisms evolve. What makes them evolve is that their genes are dynamic and in motion. A familiar example is the stripe-y corn - called Indian corn - that you buy in the fall.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Fall
Image of Nina Fedoroff
As people around the world become more affluent, they are demanding diets richer in animal protein, which will require ever more robust feed crop yields to sustain.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Animal
Image of Nina Fedoroff
India has the opportunity to be a leader in genetic engineering, It has institutions that no other country has.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Country
Image of Nina Fedoroff
I don't know how you overcome the dearth of scientists in the government positions.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Government
Image of Nina Fedoroff
We have domesticated crops over a very long period of time, like tens of thousands of years. And crops get - seeds get carried. Sometimes, if they're very small seeds, they get scattered off trucks. Pollen travels.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Years
Image of Nina Fedoroff
In many places in the developed world, we eat or waste probably twice as many food calories as we really need. We're wasteful of food. We ship all over the world. We're now realizing that generating the energy to ship the food around the world is also ruining our climate.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Energy
Image of Nina Fedoroff
In the last century, as we learned more about genes, we were able to devise ways of accelerating evolution.
- Nina Fedoroff
Collection: Way