Guest guest Posted May 14, 2007 Report Share Posted May 14, 2007 Summary and Overview http://www.non-gm-farmers.com/news_details.asp?ID=506 Summary GM crops should be analysed on a case by case basis for benefits, alternatives, risks and the risk management needed: On a case by case basis - GM canola Benefits: GM canola does not benefit farmers - it only gives post emergent resistance to different chemicals (the same as our non-GM varieties). Contrary to claims, the GM process does not give increased yield and can not be planted early without the use of pre emergent chemicals. The single gene technology of GM canola only gives chemical resistance and it does not give benefits not associated with chemical resistance. In the case of Bayer Cropsciences hybrid canola Invigor, the chemical the crop is resistant to is far more expensive and not as effective as the chemicals we use now on our non-GM canola. In the case of Monsanto's Roundup Ready canola, the crop is resistant to glyphosate but farmers are already constantly told to cut the use of glyphosate in our rotations as weeds are developing resistance to it (it is our most commonly used chemical in the agricultural industry and we can not afford to lose its effectiveness). There appears to be a significant yield penalty associated with Roundup Ready crops. Alternatives: There are far better non-GM alternatives. We have a range of other weed control techniques including non-GM chemical resistant canola. It should be relatively easy to produce non-GM glyphosate resistant canola as our weeds are developing glyphosate resistance without us wanting them to. The benefits claimed of biotechnology are most often referring to non-GM biotechnology and the advances in genome market identification, selective breeding will fast track conventional breeding to produce the desired results. The majority of farmers prefer to market as non-GM. Risks: Contamination will occur and economic loss will occur because consumers and markets are rejecting GM products. This will impact negatively on both GM and non-GM growers as it will be too difficult and too expensive to segregate GM from non-GM. GM canola will impact negatively on all of our markets. For example, no GM canola can be present in non-GM canola which will be impossible to comply with, beekeepers selling GM-free honey need to sign a 5km exclusion zone declaration, half of our wheat can not have any trace of GM canola present. Risk Management: All non-GM farmers want is to ensure that non-GM farmers will not be negatively impacted by a GM crop that we do not want and do not need. We insist that the liability for all economic loss to be carried by the GM industry rather than the non-GM grower as proposed. This is being refused by the GM industry as they would prefer non-GM growers to lose the right to market as non-GM. They prefer to deny the choice for consumers and farmers to source and supply non-GM products. Julie Newman National Spokesperson, Network of Concerned Farmers Overview: Why do the GM industry, who clearly have a vested interest in promoting GM crops, feel they have the right to remove the GM-free status of Australia without adequately compensating those concerned if economic loss is experienced? A " trust us, but farmers can pay if we are wrong " attitude is clearly not accepted by farmers or the Australian state governments who have the role of assessing economic risk. Farmers, farm lobby groups and politicians are targetted by a range of pro-GM activists promoting dreams and hiding realities. We have the GM industry wanting to profit by patenting and controlling the source that all food is derived from, the scientists and research industry wanting to profit from the advantage of encouraging corporate investment to plant breeding, the governments wanting to back out of funding research and development (one of Australia's only subsidies) and supply chain participants wanting to profit by developing closed loop marketing systems and contractual agreements to lock farmers in to specific products, production methods and supply chains. GM benefits need to be assessed more carefully and we need to look beyond the promises to the reality of what Australian farmers are actually being offered. We are being offered chemical resistant canola that does not appear to yield or return more benefit than our many non-GM chemical resistant canola varieties. It is not acceptable that almost all economic reports are based on the best yield improvements that the GM industry claim has occurred in Canada rather than from any factual data presented from a range of independent Australian trials. Coexistence is known by all to be impossible to comply with the zero detectable tolerance level required but instead of acknowledging this problem, the pro-GM activists (most with a vested interest) are trying to mislead the public and government to believe that the level required for coexistence for a positive " non-GM " or " GM-free " label is the same level that triggers the requirement for a positive " GM " label. As coexistence is scientifically proven to be impossible to comply with the zero tolerance of legal requirements and market demands, or too difficult and too expensive to implement, all farmers will be expected to market on the GM market and market risk is considerable. Although it is the intention of the GM industry to expect consumers to accept GM on the basis that there will be no choice, consumers will not be so obliging and will merely turn to an alternative non-canola oil on the basis that all canola is GM. Our domestic canola market (around 30% of our market) has clearly indicated their reluctance to accept GM, several Japanese and Chinese customers have made similar claims and EU (with a clear market demand for non-GM) accounts for roughly 13% of our export market when based on a 5 year average. Perhaps the biggest market loss would be the fact that over half of our wheat export volume is sent to GM-sensitive clients that have indicated they want no trace of GM canola in our wheat, which would be impossible to comply with considering wheat follows canola in a normal crop rotation system and it would be far too expensive to grade the volume of grain concerned. Similar market loss will occur on a range of products from barley, lupins, hay, honey, stock feed and stock fed traces of GM grain. Farmers market a food for consumers that are rejecting GM and all farmers can not afford to throw these markets away just to let a few farmers give GM canola a try. Even trials could be a threat to the economic wellbeing of Australian farmers if contamination is not strictly managed. An Extract from The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) report on " Co-existence between genetically modified crops, and conventional and organic crops " . " Consumer caution has meant whole areas where GMO cultivation gives rise to an increased risk of contamination being effectively boycotted whether or not contamination has actually occurred. The mere fact that GM wheat was on an experimental basis in a particular German federal state caused the largest German milling group to stop buying wheat from that area. " Governments and decision makers have a duty of care to ensure that they can not ignore the fact that there will be economic loss and market risk and when so many markets will be affected by the introduction of GM canola, it is very very clear that the risks far outweighs any perceived benefits. Farmers can not, and will not, accept the associated loss to our income and as GM crops are the intruder to our industry, the GM industry should accept the responsibility for containing their product and ensuring it does not contaminate other markets. All Australian states that rigorously assessed economic risk called moratoriums for good, well documented reasons. After a rigorous assessment and review process including visiting US and Canada, the cross party committee of West Australia concluded that " the balance of evidence suggests that the potential benefits from the commercialisation of GM crops are not sufficient to weigh against the risks. " and also included that the " WA Government has a responsibility to protect the existing rights of non-GM growers and that non-GM growers should not shoulder the financial responsibility for identity preservation, should identity preservation be deemed necessary. " The South Australian select committee recommended that " industry must be able to guarantee coexistence to meet market demands for different classes of crops and products, eg. GM-free, non-GM and GM, " , that there be an establishment of " rigorous and cost effective segregation and IP systems through the total production and supply chain " and " the segregation and IP systems must be agreed upon by the whole of the production and supply chain. " The Victorian Government commissioned a report by Professor Peter J Lloyd (independent adviser), who found: " Release of GM canola for commercial production would be subject to whatever regulations and controls are deemed necessary to manage the risks. The State of Victoria, or the cooperating States as a group if cooperation among growing states is possible, would determine industry standards. Self-regulation by the industry does not adequately address the issues in an industry with systemic problems affecting other stakeholders. " Despite the evidence presented at the Victorian hearing, it was ignored that " Non-GM " and " GM-free " means no detectable content of GM is allowed, which would mean coexistence would not be possible. The report also failed to cover the fact that farmers are now liable for contamination caused by both commercial release and trials as the guarantee of GM-free status was withdrawn when GM canola was approved at Federal level and farmers are required to sign contractual agreements guaranteeing a GM-free status of their produce. Even the Federal Government has recognised the need to indemnify farmers from additional costs and market risk: Quote from Appendix 1 - Department of Agriculture Fisheries & Forestry - Australia produced document titled Biotechnology Strategy for Agriculture, Food and Fibre. - " considering that the application of biotechnology in the agriculture, food and fibre industries should not jeopardise market opportunities or impose unreasonable costs on existing producers; " Non-GM farmers have not been warned that they would be liable for economic loss caused by contamination as they will be signing contractual guarantees that indemnify the supply chain. Those wanting to grow GM crops are not told that they can well be sued for any loss incurred from contaminating their neighbours, that this risk appears to be uninsurable, that they could suffer loss of land values and associated loss in equity which would in turn affect their bank loans and viability. The GM industry claim that decisions should be " science based " rather than " economic based " which is clearly ignoring the fact that the world revolves around economics and that economics is the reason why the GM proponents want GM crops in preference to the better plant breeding advances in non-GM biotechnology. If a less economic, more " scientific " angle is to be pursued we should remove the right to patent living organisms as this economic incentive is clearly the driving force for forcing GM on a reluctant population. If the future option of GM pharmaceutical or industrial crops is accepted, there is clear evidence that consumers do not wish to be accidentally and unknowingly consuming a range of pharmaceuticals or industrial plastics in their ceareals and yet it will be impossible for farmers to avoid contamination. If wreckless decisions are made, farmers could not only lose our ability to market food crops consumers prefer, but we could lose our ability to market food crops at all. Without adequate risk management, the introduction of GM crops will seriously threaten farmers long term economic viability. Farmers will take whatever action is necessary to ensure our industry is not threatened and accordingly farmers are poised to take legal action to recover economic loss. The Network of Concerned farmers are non-GM farmers not wanting to be adversely affected by a crop we do not need, do not want and can not afford and we believe nobody has the right to force us to compensate the GM industry without adequate and fair redress. Julie Newman National Spokesperson Network of Concerned Farmers www.non-gm-farmers.com ------------------- *** ----------------------- 2. Short summary with more focus on the general public : 20th May, 2004: A farmers perspective Genetically modified foods are rejected by consumers and rejected by the food supply industry protecting their brand names. Accordingly, there is a need to keep GM and non-GM crops completely segregated but this is impossible to control on-farm due to the nature of the crop. There is evidence worldwide that every effort to control contamination has failed within a few years. Contamination will occur, market rejection will occur and liability and insurance difficulties will affect all supply chain participants. Contrary to claims, no contamination can be detected if a product is labelled non-GM or GM-free and 1% GM contamination tolerance has been touted as acceptable when it is not. There is high market sensitivity to very low levels of GM contamination in any of our produce. We would be breeching international trade agreements if we do not label contaminated products as GM. We would be breaking the law if we labelled a contaminated product as " GM-free " or " non-GM " when it is not and farmers would not have confidence to sign expected supply chain guarantees of no contamination when we deliver our seed. Industries other than canola will also be affected, half of our wheat export volume requires a zero tolerance of contamination and other exports of grains such as lupins and barley are at similar risk. We can not supply contaminated stock feed to some stock such as the dairy, beef, mutton, pork, mutton and even the yabby industry. The chief debate centres around a market reality that no GM contamination is to be detected in a range of agricultural produce and an industry expectation that contamination is impossible to control so will have to be tolerated. This is not acceptable when farmers not wishing to grow this product will be liable for not being able to meet contractual demands for delivering a product markets are demanding. Farmers are being promised coexistence and the ability to market as non-GM when behind the scenes the GM industry has prepared the crop management plans and ensured it will be too difficult and too expensive to do so. Rather than the GM grower being expected to keep GM contained, it will be up to the non-GM grower to keep GM out - which is impossible. This removes the GM industries market competition because it will be impossible to sell as GM-free. This denies farmers and consumers a choice because all farmers will be effectively forced to market as GM. Consumers want a choice to avoid GM foods and do not want to pay more to avoid a product they do not wish to consume. If farmer concerns are ignored, there will be no choice for consumers or the choice will be extremely expensive to compensate farmers for the costly and time-consuming measures needed to attempt to segregate the product. Farmers are being misled to believe GM will solve problems when there is more than enough evidence to show that there is little benefit and huge risks. Due to our own funding, Australia is at the forefront of non-GM biotechnology where GM is used in laboratory research in order to produce non-GM crops with desired traits. We do have good alternative choices that do not negatively impact on markets or consumer choices. The expensive Federal regulatory process has done little more than deflect liability from the GM companies for the risks associated with their product. As with any other product, we believe the GM companies themselves should be liable for all negative consequences arising from the introduction of their product. There is no intention in the existing coexistence principles to segregate efficiently and it appears the aim of any proposed commercial release trials is to contaminate and place all costs and liabilities on to those farmers not wishing to grow GM. This will remove the choice of both farmers and consumers because it will be too difficult and too expensive to market as non-GM. " Is industry prepared and under existing terms, will farmers and consumers have a choice? " The answer is a very clear NO. Julie Newman Network of Concerned Farmers www.non-gm-farmers.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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