Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 News Update From The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods ---- Dear News Update Subscribers, Posted below are two articles of interest. CONTROVERSIAL REPORT DELAYED A report completed months ago by the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) is being delayed, perhaps for political reasons. Of significant importance is the recommendation that U.S. exports of genetically engineered corn be ground up before being sent to Mexico. Mexico does not allow genetically engineered corn to be grown in that country. However, genetically engineered corn from the U.S. is allowed to be fed to cattle in Mexico. In the past, some Mexican farmers planted genetically engineered corn imported as animal feed and it cross-pollinated with native corn. The scientists writing the report recommended that future exports to Mexico be ground up to avoid the possibility of the corn being planted. As you might expect, supporters of the biotech industry oppose grinding the corn. They argue that it will add extra expense and give the impression that there is something wrong with genetically engineered crops. And they fear if this additional processing is done for exports to Mexico, it will add validity to demands from countries in Africa and Europe that also want the corn ground up. The first article posted below from the Chicago Tribune titled " Report could put a crimp in corn exports " will provide further details. CONCERN GROWS OVER GMO GENE FLOW The second article from Associated Press is titled " Engineered " escapees " worry organic farmers. " It discusses the growing concern about " gene flow " from genetically engineered crops and how it can contaminate organic and conventional crops. The article mentions the government report released last week that found pollen from genetically engineered grass traveling over 12 miles. Next week, The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods will be issuing an ACTION ALERT regarding the genetically engineered grass mentioned in the article. The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has opened up a " public comment " period on this biotech grass until October 25th. The USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service intends to prepare an environmental impact statement on this genetically engineered grass. Our ACTION ALERT will oppose the approval of this Roundup Ready grass from Monsanto. And we will demand the environmental impact statement to be very comprehensive. Craig Winters Executive Director The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods The Campaign PO Box 55699 Seattle, WA 98155 Tel: 425-771-4049 E-mail: label Web Site: http://www.thecampaign.org Mission Statement: " To create a national grassroots consumer campaign for the purpose of lobbying Congress and the President to pass legislation that will require the labeling of genetically engineered foods in the United States. " *************************************************************** Report could put a crimp in corn exports Caution urged for transgenic crop By Hugh Dellios Chicago Tribune foreign correspondent Published September 29, 2004 MEXICO CITY -- Even before its release, a report addressing the potential impact of genetically altered U.S. corn exports to Mexico has stirred up a dust devil of controversy, including fears that the Bush administration is trying to bury it. The report by a group of distinguished scientists and policy experts urges caution in trade policies that send millions of tons of corn to Mexico from Illinois and other states, including a recommendation to grind it up first. The report also could influence a global debate over the safety of modified food. Originally scheduled to be made public in June, the report has not been released. Last week, the agency managing the report, the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation, handed it privately to the U.S., Mexican and Canadian governments, which have 60 days to decide whether it should be published at all. The delay has angered the study's authors and environmentalists, some of whom allege that U.S. officials have pressured the CEC, a watchdog agency associated with the North American Free Trade Agreement, to keep the report under wraps. The critics note that the 60-day period could postpone the report's release until after the November presidential election, when votes from corn-farming states such aslike Iowa will be crucial. `Totally unacceptable' " This is totally unacceptable, " said Jose Sarukhan, a prominent ecology professor at the Autonomous National University of Mexico and chairman of the expert panel. " Surely [u.S. officials] don't like it, but it is the same report they didn't like three months ago. " Sarukhan said he planned to consult with the other panelists to see whether they would consider releasing the report independently. U.S. officials dismiss suggestions of undue pressure. But they and Canadian officials have strongly criticized the quality of the science used in the report and say it goes beyond its original ecological scope. Industry groups have made the same criticisms. " We want to make sure that any recommendations in the report are fully supported by science, " said Richard Hood, a spokesman for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. " As the process allows, we raised concerns. That's been responsible for the length of the process, not us delaying anything. " Hood said the CEC rules are " pretty flexible " and that U.S. officials will take longer than 60 days if they need it. According to an EPA letter to the CEC in July, the draft report recommended that U.S. corn imports be " milled immediately upon entry into Mexico. " That would ensure that local farmers could not plant it and spread the modified genes but it would be very expensive and " a significant barrier to trade, " the letter said. The draft report also recommended that Mexico reinforce a national ban on planting and experimenting with modified corn and educate peasant farmers not to plant it, the EPA letter said. This year the U.S. is expected to export 6.3 million metric tons of corn to Mexico. The majority is shipped by companies like Archer Daniels Midland in the Midwest and as much as half contains modified genes created by companies like St. Louis-based Monsanto. The vast majority is for animal feed, not for planting or human consumption. But lab-modified genes recently have been found growing inexplicably in homegrown corn crops in southern Mexico, the home of the world's original corn. " Mexico is a very, very important market " for U.S. corn, said Ricardo Celma, Mexico representative for the U.S. Grain Council, who said any halt in U.S. corn imports would make prices collapse. " It would have a major impact on the Chicago Board of Trade, " he said. Moratorium sought Greenpeace and other environmental groups have urged the CEC panel to demand a moratorium on Mexican imports of transgenic corn. They say a ban is needed until further studies prove that modified crops pose no risk to human health and will not displace Mexico's native corn. Industry and government officials say fears about transgenic imports are unsubstantiated and overblown. They say a ban also would be harmful to Mexico's policy of using cheap U.S. corn to improve the diet of its growing population. CEC officials refused to comment on the delay. The commission was established after NAFTA was signed in 1994 to advise the U.S., Mexico and Canada on the effect of free trade on the environment. Its recommendations are non-binding. Scientists reject criticism The panel of experts--15 geneticists, botanists and others, all approved by the three governments--scoff at criticism of their scientific data. Sarukhan, the chairman, said that the report was final in June except for a few minor corrections and that the authors will not accept changes to their conclusions. While declining to discuss the report's recommendations, he said the panel agreed that Mexico should adopt a " precautionary principle " in dealing with transgenics. " We need to proceed carefully, evaluating risks and having monitoring systems in Mexico which do not [presently] exist, in order to be really safe, " he said. " On the other hand, we think this is an extremely important technology that Mexico should [master] ... so it can make its own choices in terms of which transgenes and where and how they should be utilized and not just using and importing whatever is produced in other countries, " he said. Critics of the delay suggest the reason is that the report could hurt U.S. efforts to overcome concerns that have blocked transgenic crop exports to Europe and Africa. Zambia and other countries have refused U.S. corn as food aid unless it is milled. The Bush administration challenged the European Union last year through the World Trade Organization over the EU's restrictions on importing transgenic products, saying they unfairly obstruct trade. In defending their position, European officials have cited the calls for a corn-import moratorium in Mexico. They hope a separate panel of experts will be chosen to study the issue in that case as soon as November. *************************************************************** Engineered " escapees " worry organic farmers By PAUL ELIAS The Associated Press Sep 27, 2004 SAN FRANCISCO - California rice farmers are worried Japanese customers will boycott their products if genetically engineered rice is allowed into the state. In Hawaii, organic papaya farmers are outraged because traces of genetically engineered papaya are showing up in their harvest. Biologists call it " gene flow. " It's how plants have swapped genetic material through cross pollination since life first appeared. But for people who choose to grow crops without genetically altering them, this natural biological exchange is a threat when bioengineered organisms are involved. Oregon study Last week, already heightened tensions between the biotech industry and its foes peaked when the U.S. government published a study showing that genetically engineered grass found its way into conventionally grown grass some 12 miles away in Oregon's Willamette Valley. The study led to renewed calls for tighter gene-flow regulations, especially from farmers who promise customers that their products are free of genetically modified material. More farmers are reporting finding trace amounts of genetically modified organisms cross-pollinated or otherwise mingled with their organically grown crops. Those are potentially devastating discoveries because organic consumers generally demand that the higher-priced food they buy be free of biotechnological adulteration. The problem, like the weather, respects no boundaries. Around the world A North American Free Trade Agreement watchdog group said in March it had found genetically engineered corn in Mexico despite that country's 6-year-old biotechnology ban. Meanwhile, consumers in Japan, Europe and elsewhere demand all their crops are grown conventionally. Farmers who can't make those biotech guarantees risk losing those markets. U.S. labeling rules allow for trace amounts of genetically engineered material in organic products. Still, organic growers and other growers fear market perception will turn against them if customers perceive that gene flow isn't being controlled. That's why many rice farmers in California opposed a biotechnology company's plan this summer to increase the acreage it devotes to rice spliced with human genes to produce medicines. The state government refused to let the company expand. It's also why organic growers in Hawaii earlier this month symbolically dumped 20 genetically engineered papayas into a trash bin labeled with a " biohazard " sign. Papayas genetically engineered to resist a virus were first grown commercially in 1998 and widely credited with turning around a moribund industry devastated by disease. But the bioengineered variety is not the only papaya grown in Hawaii. " We are finding widespread contamination, and farmers are concerned, " said Noli Hoye of the Hawaii anti-biotech group that organized the protest. " Once these genetically engineered crops are released commercially, they can't be contained. " An increasing number of scientific studies show evidence that genetically engineered crops are creeping into conventionally grown fields, including the grass study conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency. The Union of Concerned Scientists in February found trace amounts of genetically engineered seeds of corn, soy and canola mixed in with seeds that were supposed to be conventionally bred. " We are concerned about gene flow, " said U.S. Agriculture Department spokeswoman Meghan Thomas. But she said the USDA's regulatory reach extends only to experimental crops. Once biotech crops are approved for market, as papayas were in 1997, the government's oversight essentially ends. Fears exaggerated? The levels of cross-pollination in other studies were found to be minuscule, and industry leaders say gene flow concern is overblown. " Organic acreage has really boomed at the same time biotech acreage has boomed, " said Chris Horner, a spokesman for Monsanto. " With good agricultural practices, there is no reason these two technologies can't coexist. " Horner and others point out that no known lawsuits have been filed against any biotechnology company alleging that gene flow has caused anyone economic harm. Call for coexistence " It has not been a significant problem, and proving gene flow caused you economic harm will be difficult, " said Drew Kershner, a University of Oklahoma law professor who has written extensively on the subject. " If you are neighborly and trying to get along, biotechnology and organic farming can coexist very easily. " Still, some organic farmers say the cross-pollination issue already is cutting into their profits because they've undertaken more costly planting processes or lost sales over fears their crops were corrupted by genetically modified organisms. The Organic Farming Research Foundation said about 11 percent of the farmers responding to a survey last year said they have been DNA-testing crops for the presence of genetically modified organisms. --------- To be d from the News Update from The Campaign mailing list simply below http://www.thecampaign.org/cgi-bin/sment/s.cgi?r=1 & l=2 & e=namaska7=:aol.com AOL USERS: <a href= " http://www.thecampaign.org/cgi-bin/sment/s.cgi?r=1 & l=2 & e=namaska7=:aol.com\ " >One-Click Un Link Here</a> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 I don’t know how many people heard Sunyatta’s show on GMO but it was explosive. This devil gov’t is not going to stop til it has all the control of the food, period. All I can think of is that James Brown song where he says we need to get some land so we can control our own food. Soon, I feel that organic won’t be safe. Khepere Namaska7 [Namaska7] Thursday, September 30, 2004 11:43 PM Fwd: Controversial report delayed + Concern grows over GMO gene flow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 I couldn't agree more Khepere. It was really a challenge for me yesterday to hear the whole show because being at work, I had many interuptions. My only regret is that everyone that particularly care for and tried to contact and have them listen to the show wasn't available. This was really a show to have had recorded.Good Health to You Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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