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BASF Plant Science

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BASF Plant Science is a subsidiary of BASF in which all plant biotechnology activities are consolidated. The company was founded in 1998 and employs approximately 700 people at 6 different locations worldwide.[1] The headquarters of BASF Plant Science is located in Research Triangle Park (North Carolina, US) and has research sites in the US, Canada, and Europe. BASF Plant Science mainly develops genetically modified seeds at these locations.[1]

Company Profile

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BASF Plant Science genetically modifies crops like maize, soy, cotton, canola, sugarcane, sugar beet, and potatoes.

These genetically modified crops are sold and distributed through biotechnology companies like Monsanto,[2] KWS Saat,[3] Embrapa,[4] or CTC (Centro de Tecnologia Canavieira).[5]

Products

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Loading of Amflora potatoes, trial planting in Sweden 2008

As of 2011, BASF Plant Science has developed three products:

  • Amflora, a potato developed initially for the European market, producing pure amylopectin starch for industrial use. Waxy potato starch is used in industrial procedures to make yarn stronger and paper glossier; it also makes spray concrete adhere better to walls.[6] Due to lack of acceptance of GM crops in Europe, in 2012 BASF Plant Science decided to stop its commercialization and research activities on the European potato varieties Amflora and Fortuna. Further, it announced the relocation of the corporate headquarters from Germany to the USA.[7][8]
  • Cultivance is an herbicide resistant soybean. It received market permission from Brazil in 2010. Marketing and sales of Cultivance are through Embrapa, a Brazilian company.[4]
  • NutriDense is a higher nutritional maize plant used as a feed source for pigs, chickens, and cows.[9]

A range of more crops are in the pipeline:

  • Maize, soy, canola, and cotton: The aim is higher biomass, and plants that better resist environmental factors such as drought or disease. These crops are developed on the island of Kauai in Hawaii and are distributed in cooperation with Monsanto.[10]
  • Sugarcane, sugar beet: The aim is to develop plants that produce more sugar for use in food or as raw material for biofuel production.[11]
  • Fortuna Potato: developed for resistance against Phytophthora infestans, a disease which is difficult to combat for European agriculturists.[12]

Other products are being developed for the food industry for use in genetically modified foods. Examples include plants with a higher content of omega-3 fatty acids for preventing cardiovascular diseases,[13] and plants with a higher content of astaxanthin which is used in fish farming as feed additive,[14] and as a food supplement for humans.

References

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  1. ^ a b BASF – Plant biotechnology
  2. ^ The New York Times – World Business Briefing: Europe: BASF and Monsanto in Crop Research.
  3. ^ ISAAA – BASF and KWS SAAT AG collaborate on biotech sugarbeet
  4. ^ a b Press Release – BASF and Embrapa’s Cultivance soybeans receive approval for commercial cultivation in Brazil.
  5. ^ Reuters – Brazil CTC, BASF to develop drought-tolerant cane.
  6. ^ "BASF – Amflora". Archived from the original on 2013-02-06. Retrieved 2010-02-20.
  7. ^ BASF stampft Genkartoffel Amflora ein
  8. ^ "BASF drops GM potato projects".
  9. ^ "NutriDense". Archived from the original on 2010-11-23. Retrieved 2010-02-20.
  10. ^ Food Navigator – Monsanto and BASF sign R&D agreement, 2007
  11. ^ BASF – CTC and BASF enter technical cooperation agreement in sugarcane
  12. ^ www.u-bourgogne.fr – BASF Plant Biotechnology
  13. ^ BASF – Biotechnology at BASF[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ Wipo
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