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| Seminis
varieties
Seminis is a breeder, producer and/or vendor of the
following varieties:
Beans: EZ Gold, Eureka, Goldrush,
Kentucky King, Lynx, Bush Blue Lake 94
Carrot: Nutri-Red, Sweet Sunshine,
Karina, Chantenay #1, Chantilly, Lariat
Cucumber: Dasher II, Daytona, Turbo,
Speedway, Sweet Slice, Yellow Submarine, Sweeter Yet
Lettuce: Esmeralda, Lolla Rossa (and
derivatives), Red Sails, Red Tide, Blackjack, Summer
time, Monet, Baby Star, Red Butterworth
Melons: Alaska, Bush Whopper, Casablanca,
Dixie Jumbo, Early Crisp
Onion: Arsenal, Hamlet, Red Zeppelin, Mars, Superstar,
Candy
Peppers: Valencia, Camelot, King Arthur,
Red Knight, Aristotle, Northstar, Biscane, Caribbean
Red, Serrano del Sol, Early Sunsation, Fat and Sassy
Spinach: Melody, Unipack 151Spinach, Bolero, Cypress
Squash: Autumn Delight, Bush Delicata
(producer-vendor), Really Big Butternut, Early Butternut,
Buckskin Pumpkin (AAS), Seneca Autumn, Table ace
Tomato: Big Beef, Beefmaster, First
Lady I and II, Early Girl, Pink Girl, Golden Girl, Sunguard,
Sun Chief Sweet, Baby Girl, Sweet Million
Watermelon: Royal Flush, Royal Star
(pet), Stargazer, Starbright, Stars and Stripes, Yellow
doll, Tiger
Zucchini/Summer Squash: Blackjack,
Daisy, Fancycrook, Sunny Delight, Lolita, Sungreen
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Posted February 22, 2005: The news of Monsanto’s
agreement to purchase Seminis has received little attention from
the media other than the financial pages and a few seed industry
and anti-globalization web sites. But then again, why should it?
How many consumers – of food or seed – have even heard
of Seminis? And yet, as Seminis spinmeister Gary Koppenjan said,
“If you've had a salad, you've had a Seminis product."
It is estimated that Seminis controls 40 percent of the U.S. vegetable
seed market and 20 percent of the world market—supplying the
genetics for 55 percent of the lettuce on U.S. supermarket shelves,
75 percent of the tomatoes, and 85 percent of the peppers, with
strong holdings in beans, cucumbers, squash, melons, broccoli, cabbage,
spinach and peas. The company’s biggest revenue source comes
from tomato and peppers seeds, followed by cucumbers and beans.
In large part, these numbers reflect usage of Seminis varieties
within large industrial production geared towards supermarkets,
but Seminis seeds are also widely used by regional conventional
and organic farmers as well as market and home gardeners. Johnny’s,
Territorial, Fedco, Nichol’s, Rupp, Osborne, Snow, and Stokes
are among the dozens of commercial and garden seed catalogs that
carry the more than 3,500 varieties that comprise Seminis’
offerings. This includes dozens of All-American Selections and an
increasing number of varieties licensed to third parties for certified
organic seed production.
The brand-name companies under Seminis (such as Petoseed) have
developed, released, produced and distributed varieties common to
the market farmer and even home gardener. These include Big Beef,
Sweet Baby Girl and Early Girl Tomatoes; Simpsons Elite and Red
Sails Lettuces; Red Knight and King Arthur Peppers; Gold Rush and
Blackjack Zucchinis; Stars & Stripes Melon; and Bush Delicata
and Early Butternut squashes (see sidebar for
other popular varieties).
Many of the Seminis varieties are derived from their in-house breeding
programs, as well as industry alliances with DuPont, and university
partnerships with the likes of Cornell, Texas A & M and the
University of California. The company’s F1 hybrid genetics
are considered excellent in many areas, including overwintering
brassicas, disease resistance in cucurbits, packing qualities in
green beans, and flavor in tomatoes. “Organic farmers love
our product,” Koppenjan told me, “We have the disease
resistance, and this is more important in organics than conventional,
where farmers have more disease-control options.”
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The implications of Monsanto – often
associated with the antithesis of the organic movement –
purchasing a company that serves the organic community are complex. |
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The implications of Monsanto – often associated with the
antithesis of the organic movement – purchasing a company
that serves the organic community are complex. This has certainly
been the catalyst for the emails that some catalog companies are
receiving. Both Johnny’s and Territorial have received strikingly
similar missives with nearly the same wording, demanding that the
firms reveal their Seminis’ varieties “so I can avoid
them at all costs. Otherwise I’ll toss your catalog.”
Seed catalogs may see more of this, as Monsanto is a large target
amongst those concerned with globalization.
While voting with ones dollars can be an effective tool of change,
it is also important to recognize that these are also seed catalogs
that have recognized the needs of smaller organic producers, offering
strong lists of regional varieties and expanding their certified
organic selections. None of these companies was overjoyed with news
of the acquisition, and they all seemed to be in different phases
of analyzing its impact. It’s not an easy task. Seminis’
varieties account for 11 percent of Fedco Seed’s gross sales,
and the numbers are much higher in categories like melons and squash.
While Fedco founder C.R. Lawn expressed his personal inclination
to have nothing to do with Monsanto, the volume of sales demands
careful consideration. Fedco is surveying its staff to decide how
to respond, with options ranging from phasing out all Monsanto-Seminis
varieties to putting a “tax” on these varieties and
using this money to fund regional grassroots seed development.
For some growers and seed catalogs, this may seem a non-issue;
what matters to them is the quality of the variety, not the politics
of who owns that variety. And even if one does care and would like
to take one’s business elsewhere, there may not be immediate
replacements for many of the Seminis varieties. The economic impact
of abandoning a variety that keeps the cash flowing cannot be easily
overlooked. For others, the Monsanto connection may be a line that
can’t be crossed. Regardless of one’s stance, the acquisition
offers a history worth tracing in the continuing trend of food industry
consolidation, a lesson that should give everyone pause to consider
the future of seeds.
In the early 1990s, billionaire Alfonso Romo, descendent of a Mexican
president, Olympian athlete in horse jumping, bakery and beverage
mogul, and owner of Ciagarrera La Modena – Mexico’s
largest cigarette company – set out to become the global king
of vegetable seeds. Romo had watched agrochemical companies gobble
up seed businesses in the larger agronomic crops like corn, and
he noticed that there was little attention being paid to the ‘minor
crops’ of the vegetable seed industry. By 1994, he had succeeded
in building Seminis, purchasing longstanding seed companies such
as Asgrow, Petoseed (which had recently purchased the Dutch firm
Royal Sluis) and dozens of Asian seed companies. Seminis grew quickly,
thrived and went public (trading as Empresas La Moderna or ELM,
the former parent company of his cigarette firm—which Romo
sold in 1997 for $1.5 billion).
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According to seed industry insiders, one
of Seminis’ strengths was also its weakness. Early on,
it benefited from internal competition . . . This may have led
to excessive inventory – the company’s list swelled
to near 6,000 varieties at one point before cutting a whopping
2,500 varieties in 1998 |
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According to seed industry insiders, one of the company’s
strengths was also its weakness. Early on, it benefited from internal
competition, retaining the brands such as Petoseed and Asgrow and
allowing Seminis breeders to vie for product development and placement.
This may have led to excessive inventory – the company’s
list swelled to near 6,000 varieties at one point before cutting
a whopping 2,500 varieties in 1998 (and leaving more than a few
farmers looking for new varieties).
In 2003, Seminis was in a financial slump; shares slipped to around
50 cents each from previous highs of more than $7 a share. Fox Paine
and Co. – a firm specializing not in agriculture but in buyouts
– stepped in to purchase majority control of the company and
stabilized the slide. Financial analysts and the seed trade were
waiting to see the fate of the gene giant in the hands of this holding
firm. With the Monsanto announcement, the wait is over. The purchase
catapulted Monsanto past rival DuPont (Pioneer Seed), making them
the world’s largest seed company – first in vegetables
and fruits, second in agronomic crops, and the world’s third
largest agrochemical company.
This is not the first time Seminis and Monsanto have done business.
In 1997, Monsanto began to insert its Roundup resistant gene into
one of Seminis’ lettuces, with an agreement to split the premium
fifty-fifty. A 1999 Wall Street Journal article also noted that
Seminis had received U.S. regulatory approval for selling disease-resistant
genetically engineered squash and tomatoes with longer shelf lives
and that the firm was working on using biotechnology to create sweeter
peas and worm-proof cucumbers. In the same Journal article, Romo
envisioned a Seminis future with biotech crops such as non-browning
lettuce, broccoli with enhanced cancer-fighting properties, and
spoil-free produce. "Seeds are software," he was quoted
as saying, "and we have the seeds." Romo will stay on
as Chairman and CEO of Seminis under Monsanto, according to the
company’s press release announcing the deal.
Conjecture and Concern
While news of Monsanto’s acquisition of Seminis was less
than a blip on the general public’s radar, small groups of
farmers, activists and seed trade professionals immediately began
to connect to discuss the ramifications on a variety of list serves
and web sites over the Internet. The professionals I spoke with
for this article – Mark Hutton (former plant breeder for Peto
now at University of Maine Extension), C.R. Lawn, Rob Johnston (founder,
owner and plant breeder of Johnny’s Selected Seed), Frank
Morton (Plant breeder and owner, Wild Garden Seed), and Michael
Sligh (Policy Director, RAFI) – were in concurrence with the
concerns expressed in the online group discussions, first, with
regard to the potential decrease in varietal selection for farmers,
and second, in the potential acceleration of biotech applications
in the vegetable sector.
One can only speculate on Monsanto’s motives for purchasing
Seminis.
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“You have to ask yourself why they (Monsanto) would
decide to buy this seed company. Their Roundup herbicide patent
is expiring, so their future profits are in the biotech traits…I
think they’re going to push and see if consumers will
accept it.”
--Rob Johnston
Johnny’s Selected Seeds |
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We can make educated projections, just as Wall Street financiers
have done on news of the acquisition. Financial and agricultural
professionals interviewed in the mainstream press, such as Don Basse
of the commodity advisory group Agresources, have surmised that
the acquisition can be profitable for Monsanto only with the application
of biotechnology – as Seminis conventional seed business was
nearly half a million dollars in debt and continuing to lose money.
Basse says that it would be logical for Monsanto to use biotech
to increase the nutritional value of fruit and vegetables as opposed
to focusing on shelf life or devising pest-resistant strains. Monsanto’s
press release noted that “Biotechnology applications could
be an option, and will be evaluated in the context of Monsanto's
research-and-development priorities and potential commercial business
opportunities.” However the main tone of the announcement
focused on the trend of nutrition and healthy lifestyles. Monsanto’s
CEO put it this way, “The addition of Seminis will be an excellent
fit for our company as global production of vegetables and fruits,
and the trend toward healthier diets, has been growing steadily
over the past several years.”
“You have to ask yourself why they (Monsanto) would decide
to buy this seed company,” was the thought first shared by
Rob Johnston of Johnny’s Selected Seeds, “Their Roundup
herbicide patent is expiring, so their future profits are in the
biotech traits…I think they’re going to push and see
if consumers will accept it.” C.R. Lawn of Fedco was less
certain, feeling that Monsanto would not be bold enough to try and
sell such technology to consumers and farmers, particularly after
GMO wheat was recently shelved because of the lack of perceived
public acceptance. There is also speculation that if Monsanto can
slowly start building the GMO vegetable-fruit market, then the debate
over GMOs will become a moot point, as they will have made their
way onto the plate and thus gained acceptance (or at least acquiescence).
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“I worry about the future of
their breeding programs, that they (Monsanto) will curtail creative
directions and focus them on a Monsanto agenda.”
--Rob Johnston
Johnny’s Selected Seeds |
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Even if one does not believe that GMO vegetables will be in the
Wendy’s salad bar in short order, there is more pressing concern
that Seminis will drop many of the hybrid and open-pollinated varieties
that regional farmers currently depend upon. Prior to the buyout,
the company’s main product focus had continued to move towards
supplying genetic for the larger centers of production. “It’s
not like they’re still breeding tomatoes for the Northeast”
Rob Johnston noted. Still, Johnston conceded that it would be difficult
for Johnny’s to replace some of the Seminis varieties that
their customers turn to year after year, such as Gold Rush Zucchini
or King Arthur Pepper. Yet he feels certain that cuts are coming.
Johnston was disappointed with the news, in part he said because
he likes not only the quality of product but the Seminis breeders
themselves, “I worry about the future of their breeding programs,
that they (Monsanto) will curtail creative directions and focus
them on a Monsanto agenda.”
Organic Seed Alliance — where I serve as executive director
— has received over a dozen emails and phone calls from concerned
farmers. Minnesota farmer Jim Fruth contacted us for assistance
in “dehybridizing” a Seminis hybrid pepper that has
recently been dropped. Like many farmers, Fruth has integrated particular
varieties into his production and marketing plans and he says he
is now without a variety that is “a vital part of my livelihood.”
Nash Huber of Sequim, Washington, said that, after vast trialing,
he had found that Seminis cabbage varieties have excellent post-harvest
holding capacity, extending his marketing season and farm profitability.
He did not have high hopes of finding replacements.
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“Monsanto is going to look at
this from a bean-counter perspective. Low margin varieties get
dropped, and this means anything that’s not for large
commercial production.”
--Mark Hutton
former plant breeder
for Petoseed
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Mark Hutton worked as a squash and eggplant breeder for Petoseed
before it was purchased by Seminis. From his perspective, farmers
like Fruth and Huber should start trialing new varieties soon. “Monsanto
is going to look at this from a bean-counter perspective. Low margin
varieties get dropped, and this means anything that’s not
for large commercial production.”
One seed catalog owner I spoke with believes that farmers should
not react to the news by seeking non-Monsanto/Seminis seed sources.
He said there is no indication Monsanto will drop these varieties
and that rushing to find replacements isn’t an answer. “Where
are you going to go? Some of these varieties are irreplaceable.
Are we really going to drop or boycott some of the best material
out there because we don’t like Monsanto?” He warned
that doing so might only accelerate the downsizing of the Monsanto
product list, leaving farmers in a real lurch. “The process
of breeding alternatives to these (varieties) is a long, longterm
project. And what are you going to plant in the meantime?”
Most of the people I spoke with agreed that there are few options;
this is what is making them react to the news so passionately. In
a healthy competitive market, a producer has more than one cog to
choose from, giving the producer freedom to switch suppliers if
they have an issue with their traditional supply chain. In a highly
consolidated system, this choice is not easily apparent and may
simply not exist.
Consolidations in the seed world are nothing new. The impact is
predictable: A few breeders lose their jobs, farmers scramble to
find another variety to fit their production system but something
eventually comes along, stockholders either make or lose money,
and, in the end, food still winds up on the plate of most American
households at 7a.m., noon and 6 p.m. We’ve been here before
in recent times, and we’ve seen even bigger control of seed
ownership and distribution (although not in any of our lifetimes).
A-century-and-a-half ago there was only one mega-distributor of
seeds in this country. Lobbying and activism brought about its demise.
That distributor was the United States government, and the rabble
rousers who broke that monopoly were none other than the American
Seed Trade Association – whose largest modern financial benefactor
is none other than Monsanto. 
For more on the history of the seed industry
in the US, see:
The
shift from public to private seed systems >>
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