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Mar 18, 2020
Blog: Gene-editing crops for enhanced nutrition and productivity
Gene-editing (also known as genome-editing or genome-engineering) is a set of novel techniques that are used for manipulating the genome of an organism at desired locations. The most popular gene-editing systems are meganucleases (MNs), zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcription activator-like effector-based nucleases (TALENs), and the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas9). All of the mentioned above gene-editing systems exploit the natural gene repair mechanisms after double stranded DNA breaks caused by nucleases.
In agriculture, these techniques are also becoming popularized as new plant breeding techniques. To date, CRISPR is the most advanced gene-editing system, however, to overcome its limitations, scientists are trying to find out other alternatives to this system as well. Many CRISPR-Cas9 classes and variants are being researched and exploited for their applications in crop agriculture.
Significant growth in the agriculture biotechnology sector is expected in the coming decade, which will be dominated by the gene-editing sector. Although transgenic crops are the most adopted agriculture technology with 191.7 million hectares of area covered under biotech crops in 2017, the technology is being criticized by the end consumers. Also, high costs and lengthy regulatory procedures are constraining the growth of this segment.
The perception of gene-edited crops as natural products by many countries is making them an easy substitute for transgenic crops. USDA's 2018 decision on not regulating the plants developed through traditional and new plant breeding techniques, if they are not plant pests or developed using plant pests, has opened the prospects of growth for gene-editing technology markets in the agriculture sector.
Owing to the need for higher yields, federal governments all over the world are becoming more open to the adoption of gene-edited agricultural products. However, potential regulatory requirements, environmental and ethical concerns, and consumer acceptance might stall the growth of gene-edited crops in certain regions of the world, such as the European Union.
The potential benefits of gene-editing in crop agriculture can be broadly categorized as improved nutrition and greater productivity. The private sector is mainly focusing on improvement of maize, soybean, canola, cotton, rice, and wheat crops using gene-editing technologies. As of 2019, among large agriculture biotechnology firms, Corteva Agriscience (previously, an agriculture division of Dow DuPont) is leading with around 65 patent applications in genome editing in agriculture at the World Intellectual Property Organization.
The future looks bright. The agricultural gene-editing technologies market was worth US$ 321.89 million in 2019 and is expected to reach US$ 1446.14 million by 2024, witnessing a CAGR of 35.05%.
The NAFTA region dominates the market with 78% of the global
market share. With the presence of 12 gene-editing companies, the
United States forms the hub for the agricultural gene-editing
industry. APAC is the second largest market with 12% of the market
share. LATAM and EMEA accounts for 6% and 4% of the market shares,
respectively.
By product type, the agricultural gene-editing technology market
could be segmented into seeds, food products and technology/trait
licensing. In 2019, technology/trait licensing formed the largest
segment with a size of $193.13 million. The market for gene-edited
seeds is expected to flourish particularly in the US and Canada
over the coming decade.
Our latest report covers the market for gene editing technologies, including market drivers and constraints, regulations, patents, companies, market estimates and forecasting.
This article was published by S&P Global Commodity Insights and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.
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