🍆 Bt Brinjal — India's Most Controversial GM Food Crop
What is Bt Brinjal · How cry1Ac Works · Ti Plasmid Method · GEAC 2009 Approval · Jairam Ramesh Moratorium 2010 · Bangladesh Success · Janak & BSS-793 Field Trials · Advantages vs Concerns · PYQs & MCQs
Support: USAID, Cornell University, Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI), and state agricultural universities in India
Technology transfer: Mahyco transferred the event (EE-1) to public sector seed companies in Bangladesh and India for non-commercial development
Controversy: In 2013, Mahyco was accused of bio-piracy — accessing brinjal varieties from Karnataka and Tamil Nadu without consent from the National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) and state biodiversity boards
Damage: FSB larvae bore into shoots and fruits, causing 50–70% crop loss in severe cases. Forces farmers to spray pesticides 25–80 times per crop season — some of the heaviest pesticide use in Indian agriculture
Scale: ~5.5 lakh hectares of brinjal grown in India. India is the world's second-largest brinjal producer after China
Farmers affected: Over 14 lakh small and marginal farmers grow brinjal — a critical cash crop
🏭 Step A — How Bt Brinjal is Created (Ti Plasmid Method)
Ti Plasmid Method: Agrobacterium tumefaciens naturally infects plants via its Ti (Tumour-inducing) plasmid. Scientists exploit this: the T-DNA in the Ti plasmid is replaced with the desired gene (cry1Ac). The bacterium then infects the plant cell and integrates T-DNA (now carrying cry1Ac) into the plant chromosome — creating a transgenic plant where every cell carries the cry1Ac gene. In nature, this causes crown gall disease; in the lab, the disease genes are removed and only the useful gene is transferred.
🐛 Step B — How the Cry1Ac Protein Kills the Pest
How Cry1Ac kills the Fruit & Shoot Borer: Bt toxin crystals are ingested by the FSB larva → solubilised in the alkaline midgut → activated Cry toxins bind to specific receptors on midgut epithelial cells → toxin monomers insert into cell membrane → form pores → osmotic cell lysis → dead larva within 48–72 hours. Crucially, the Cry1Ac toxin requires the alkaline (high pH) gut of lepidopteran insects to activate — it remains harmless in the acidic stomachs of mammals, birds, and beneficial insects.
• Janak — hybrid Bt brinjal variety
• BSS-793 — hybrid Bt brinjal variety
Both contain the Bt Cry1Fa1 gene (different from the original cry1Ac in Mahyco's variety). Field trials allowed in 8 states during 2020–23 after obtaining No-Objection Certificates (NOCs) from state governments. These are publicly-developed (non-corporate) varieties — a key distinction from the Mahyco version.
• Farmers report dramatic reduction in pesticide use and cost savings
• Significantly improved incomes for small brinjal farmers
• Yields improved substantially over conventional varieties
• No measurable adverse biodiversity impacts recorded
• GEAC India actively sought this data — indicating India is watching Bangladesh's experiment closely
• No independent long-term health studies have been conducted on consumers
• Context differs: Bangladesh has far fewer wild brinjal relatives than India (India has 29 wild species) — biodiversity risk is higher here
• Bangladesh had fewer traditional varieties to protect — India has 2,000–2,500 varieties at risk
• India is the centre of brinjal diversity globally — gene flow risk far greater here
Jairam Ramesh cited: (1) Inadequate independent safety studies (2) India as biodiversity hotspot for brinjal (3) Solanaceae family's complex toxin profile (4) Lack of international scientific consensus (5) Socioeconomic impact on small farmers — as reasons for the moratorium.
- a) Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
- b) Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999
- c) Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 ✓
- d) Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972
Bt Brinjal Angle for This Question:
- Science & farming lives: Bt brinjal = science directly addresses a farmer crisis (25–80 pesticide sprays/season → near zero). Illustrates science woven into daily agricultural practice.
- Striking change #1 — Embedded pest control: Rather than spraying chemicals, the plant itself produces a targeted bio-insecticide (Cry1Ac) — a paradigm shift from external to internal crop protection.
- Striking change #2 — Regulatory science: GEAC's multi-year safety review process shows how science now governs what farmers can grow — a new relationship between lab and field.
- Striking change #3 — Global science community: Bangladesh's experience informs India's policy — agricultural science is now globalised through data sharing between GEAC and BARI.
- Tension: Science enables Bt brinjal; science also raises concerns (Solanaceae toxins, biodiversity impact) — showing science itself generates both the solution and the questions.
- (a) American Bollworm (Helicoverpa armigera)
- (b) Fruit and Shoot Borer (Leucinodes orbonalis)
- (c) Aphids and whiteflies (sucking pests)
- (d) Root-knot nematodes
1. GEAC recommended environmental release of Bt Brinjal in 2009.
2. The moratorium on Bt Brinjal was imposed in 2010 by Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh.
3. Bt cotton is currently the only commercially approved GM crop in India.
4. Field trials of new indigenous Bt Brinjal varieties (Janak & BSS-793) containing cry1Fa1 gene were approved by GEAC for 2020–23.
Which of the above are correct?
- (a) 1, 2 and 3 only
- (b) 2 and 4 only
- (c) 1, 3 and 4 only
- (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
- (a) Cry1Ac is digested before it reaches the mammalian intestine, while insects cannot digest it
- (b) Mammals have a stronger immune system that neutralises the toxin before it causes harm
- (c) Cry1Ac requires alkaline gut conditions (pH 9–11) to activate — present in insect midguts but absent in acidic mammalian stomachs. Also, specific gut receptor proteins for Cry1Ac binding are found only in lepidopteran insects, not in mammals or birds
- (d) The concentration of Cry1Ac in brinjal is too low to harm mammals but sufficient to kill insects
- (a) Indian brinjal farmers are more financially vulnerable than Bangladeshi farmers
- (b) India's GEAC regulations are stricter than Bangladesh's regulatory body
- (c) Indian brinjal is exported more widely, so contamination would have greater international trade consequences
- (d) India has approximately 2,000–2,500 brinjal varieties and 29 wild brinjal species, making transgene flow through cross-pollination a far greater biodiversity risk than in Bangladesh, which has fewer wild relatives
1. They were developed by a public sector institution (NIPB), not a private corporation.
2. They contain the Cry1Fa1 gene instead of the original Cry1Ac gene.
3. They have already been approved for commercial cultivation in India.
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 1 and 2 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
| Topic | Key Facts to Remember |
|---|---|
| What is Bt Brinjal | Transgenic brinjal with cry1Ac gene from Bacillus thuringiensis. Created using Agrobacterium Ti plasmid method. Resists Fruit and Shoot Borer (FSB) — Leucinodes orbonalis. |
| Developer | Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech (MMB). Public varieties (Janak, BSS-793 with Cry1Fa1): National Institute for Plant Biotechnology (NIPB). |
| How Cry1Ac kills | Ingested by FSB larva → activated in alkaline insect gut (pH 9–11) → binds to specific midgut receptors → forms membrane pores → osmotic cell lysis → larva dies in 48–72 hrs. Safe for mammals (acidic stomach, no receptors). |
| India Timeline | 2000 development → 2006–09 GEAC review → Oct 2009 GEAC approval → Feb 2010 Jairam Ramesh moratorium → 2020–23 field trials (Janak & BSS-793) → 2025: still under moratorium. |
| GEAC constituted under | Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 and Rules 1989. Under MoEFCC. UPSC 2015 PYQ. |
| Bangladesh | World's first country to grow Bt brinjal commercially (Oct 2013). 4 varieties: Bt Uttara, Bt Kajla, Bt Nayantara, Bt ISD006. 13+ years without mass health issues. GEAC India sought this data in 2018. |
| Advantages | 37% yield gain · 42% less insecticide · 98–100% FSB mortality · $400M/yr national benefit · Safe for beneficial insects · No morphological difference from non-Bt. |
| Concerns | Antibiotic resistance markers · Solanaceae toxin risks · India = global brinjal diversity centre (2,500 varieties, 29 wild species) · Transgene flow risk · Seed monopoly · Inadequate independent testing. |
| Current Status 2025 | Still under moratorium for commercial cultivation. Only Bt cotton is India's approved GM crop. Field trial data from Janak & BSS-793 being compiled. |
| Bio-piracy Case | 2013: Mahyco accused of bio-piracy — accessing brinjal germplasm from Karnataka & Tamil Nadu without NBA/state biodiversity board consent. First such case in India against a seed company. |
Trap 1 — "GEAC approved Bt Brinjal for commercial cultivation in 2009" → WRONG! GEAC recommended environmental release — this is NOT the same as commercial cultivation approval. The Environment Ministry still needed to ratify it. Instead, the Environment Minister imposed a moratorium in 2010 — so commercial approval never happened. The sequence: GEAC approval (2009) → Ministerial moratorium (2010) → Still on hold (2025).
Trap 2 — "Jairam Ramesh imposed the moratorium in 2009" → WRONG! The GEAC approved Bt Brinjal for environmental release in October 2009. Jairam Ramesh imposed the moratorium in February 2010 after nationwide consultations. Students confuse these two dates. Remember: 2009 = GEAC yes; 2010 = Minister no.
Trap 3 — "Bt Brinjal is effective against all pests including aphids and whiteflies" → WRONG! Bt crops using cry genes are effective ONLY against chewing lepidopteran insects (moths/butterflies) like FSB. They have NO effect on sucking pests (aphids, whitefly, jassid) — because sucking insects feed on plant sap and never consume the cry protein embedded in plant cells. This was exactly Bt cotton's limitation with whitefly infestations.
Trap 4 — "Bangladesh approved Bt Brinjal in 2009" → WRONG! Bangladesh's government approved release in October–November 2013 for the 2013–14 growing season. Not 2009. The four varieties released were Bt Uttara, Bt Kajla, Bt Nayantara, and Bt ISD006. Bangladesh, NOT India, was the first country to commercially grow Bt Brinjal.
Trap 5 — "Janak and BSS-793 are approved for commercial cultivation" → WRONG! Janak and BSS-793 received approval only for biosafety research field trials (BRL-II) in 8 states during 2020–23. They are NOT approved for commercial sale or cultivation. Also, they use the Cry1Fa1 gene — different from the original Cry1Ac in Mahyco's variety. And they are public-sector developed (NIPB/ICAR) — not corporate products.


