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Misty L. Trepke

http://www..com

 

GM Firms Finally Give Up On Planting In Britain

By Geoffrey Lean

Environment Editor

The Independent - UK

11-22-4

 

http://www.rense.com/general59/plasnt.htm

 

Industry has dropped its last attempts to get GM seeds approved for

growing in Britain, in a final surrender of its dream to spread

modified crops rapidly across the country.

 

Bayer CropScience has withdrawn the only two remaining applications

for government permission for the seeds - a winter and a spring

oilseed rape, both modified to tolerate one of the firm's

herbicides. Supporters of the technology say this will put back

their commercial use in Britain for years. Environmentalists cite it

as one more indication that they are never likely to be grown here.

 

The withdrawal of the applications marks a sharp contrast to the

situation when The Independent on Sunday began its campaign over

genetic modification nearly six years ago. At that time, 53

different GM seeds were awaiting approval, and widespread

cultivation was assumed to be only a year away.

 

The Government had put all its weight behind the technology, aiming

to make Britain its " European hub " , and Tony Blair privately

dismissed opposition as a " flash in the pan " .

 

But rising public concern forced the Government to introduce a

moratorium while tests were carried out on the effects on the

environment of growing GM crops. The trials - the results of which

were reported last year - found that the way GM beet and spring

oilseed rape were cultivated damaged wildlife more than the growing

of conventional crops (the results for winter oilseed rape are due

to be published shortly).

 

The trials appeared to clear GM maize, but the IoS revealed that the

verdict was invalid because a pesticide central to the clearance was

about to be banned. The Government still gave approval for the maize

to be grown - the only one given to a GM crop in Britain. But

shortly afterwards, Bayer announced it would not proceed, saying

that the controls on how the maize would be cultivated were too

strict.

 

GM advocates presented this as a temporary setback, arguing that new

varieties could be grown as early as 2006. Now, however, industry,

ministers and environmentalists agree that the abandonment of the

last applications means it will be the end of this decade, at the

earliest , before any GM crops can be grown.

 

Any new application will now have to go through a long process to be

approved. First, it will have to be passed by the European Union, an

unlikely prospect as it has a moratorium on GM crops. Even if that

hurdle were surmounted, the crop would have to go through two years

of trials in Britain, and then get government approval - a process

that will be fought by protesters.

 

Last week Bayer said it would not even try to carry out trials in

Britain until the Government took strong measures to stop protesters

pulling up the plants. And ministers now believe that there is no

market for the crops, so they would not be grown even if approval

were granted.

 

Yesterday, Pete Riley, director of the anti-GM campaign Five Year

Freeze, said: " This development makes it even less likely that

modified crops will ever be grown in Britain. The Government should

now abandon its doomed obsession with GM crops and put together a

coherent strategy to put the whole of UK farming on a sustainable

basis. "

 

© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd

 

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=585086

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