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this is an article in the Observer in the UK

 

I feel like strangling the man who wrote it

it is so flawed I think he got his info from the milk advisory board

the endanger species hunters club, and the baby seal clubbing club...ugghhh

have a read you'll see what I mean

 

all the best

Craig

 

 

They hailed it as a wonderfood.

 

Soya not only destroys forests and small farmers - it can also be bad for your

health

 

Anthony Barnett

Sunday November 7, 2004

The Observer

 

On a crisp winter morning in Belfast, Dr Lorraine Anderson was nearing the end

of her doctorate research project. She had spent weeks hunched over a microscope

looking at samples of sperm. Anderson was trying to figure out what made some

sperm move slower than others. As a specialist in reproductive medicine at

Belfast's Royal Maternity Hospital she was particularly interested in why some

samples moved so sluggishly that they would have trouble reaching and

fertilising an egg. Anderson knew that a sperm's 'motility' was one of the

critical factors in fertility. 'It doesn't matter how many sperm a man's got; if

they can't get from A to B then there's little chance of reproduction,' she

says.

Anderson's 'eureka' moment arrived when a complex analysis of the samples she

was working on revealed that the seminal liquid surrounding the slower-moving

sperm contained chemicals called isoflavones. These compounds are also known as

phyto-oestrogens or plant-oestrogens because they mimic oestrogen, the powerful

female hormone.

 

These highly active compounds are found in large concentrations in soya. Indeed

such are the doses of these chemicals, a woman drinking two glasses of soya milk

a day over the course of a month will see the timing of her menstrual cycle

alter. It has been estimated that infants who are fed soya formula exclusively

receive an amount of oestrogen equivalent to five birth control pills every day.

 

For a growing number of scientists the question is this: if such a strong

biologically active compound is found in soya, what is its effect on humans

regularly eating or drinking products made from the bean?

 

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In recent years the food industry has wasted no time in extolling soya's

alleged health benefits, claiming it can lower cholesterol, help with menopausal

systems, ward off osteoporosis and even reduce the risks of some cancers.

However, aside from research linking soya to reduced male fertility, studies now

link the phyto-oestrogens found in the plant to an increased risk of other types

of cancer. It has also been claimed that it damages brain function in men and

causes hidden developmental abnormalities in infants. Some even attribute the

early onset of puberty in western women to the spread of soya in diets.

 

Certainly, Dr Anderson has no doubt about the conclusions of her own research:

the more soya a man eats, she believes, the more difficulty he will have in

fertilising an egg. Anderson's head of department, Professor Neil McClure, is

one of Britain's leading fertility experts and he is already acting on the

results. 'If a couple were having trouble conceiving and the man's sperm was a

borderline case, then I have seen enough evidence from these studies to advise a

change in his diet to minimise soya.'

 

But this is much easier said than done. Today, soya is no longer just the

preserve of the vegetarian or the Asian food junkie but is an invisible

ingredient in nearly everything we eat, from pork pies and breakfast cereals to

mayonnaise and margarines. Soya is used to 'bulk out' and bind many processed

foods, such as sausages, lasagne, beefburgers and chicken nuggets and it allows

food firms to claim a higher protein content on the label. Some research

estimates that soya is present in more than 70 per cent of all supermarket

products and widely used by most fast food chains. The reason for its rapid rise

in popularity is that it is both a very cheap source of protein and - when

crushed - a source of high-quality vegetable oil.

 

No fragment of the bean is wasted. Even the husk is used as a source of fibre in

breads, cereals and snacks. The oil extracted from soya is the most consumed

vegetable oil in the world, and is used in margarines, salad dressings and

cooking oils. Food labels will simply list soya oil as vegetable oil.

 

During the oil extraction, the bean also produces a substance called lecithin.

This is a valuable emulsifier that helps fat mix with water. It is a critical

ingredient of the baking and confectionery worlds, as it prevents ingredients in

food from separating. So the food labels of many of our favourite chocolate

bars, biscuits and cakes will list lecithin as an ingredient without linking it

to soya.

 

Of course, it is not just the 'invisible' market in soya that has enjoyed rapid

growth. Soya milk is one of the success stories of the last few years. Sales

have rocketed by 20 per cent per annum and it is now one of the fastest growing

drinks in the country. Starbucks now offers frothed up soya milk with its

cappuccinos and supermarkets have invested in their own brands.

 

For those who suffer a strong allergic reaction to cow's milk or follow a vegan

diet, soya milk has always been an important option. But others drink it as a

less fattening alternative to cow's milk. What they don't realise is that it

also gives them an injection of a chemical that mimics oestrogen. One industry

source admitted that the breakthrough for soya milk came when retailers were

persuaded to put soya milk into the chilled cabinet, giving it the illusion of

being a fresh product. Some soya milk adverts tell the reader to look for it in

the fresh food section. In reality, soya milk is no more than bean juice with

some added flavouring to make it more palatable.

 

As well as the growth in popularity of soya products for direct human

consumption, some 90 per cent of the 200 million tonnes of soya produced around

the world each year is used to feed animals. Whether it's beef, lamb, bacon or

processed chicken, it is highly likely that the meat comes from an animal reared

on a diet based on soya meal. In some parts of the world, soya has long been a

small part of animal diets, but after the BSE crisis revealed the problems of

feeding cattle with animal parts, the soya alternative was taken up with

gusto.So when you eat a piece of meat, the chances are you are also consuming

some soya as well.

 

Towering proud like a church steeple, the 200ft-tall silver silo in the

Argentinian town of Las Lajitas, shines in the South American sun. These huge

storage silos, filled with dried soya beans have become the new temples of

Argentina. Today's plantation owners listen to a gospel preached by US biotech

corporation Monsanto.

 

Located more than 1,000 miles north west of Buenos Aires and close to the

Chilean and Bolivian borders, Las Lajitas is the agricultural capital of a

region that has seen untrammelled expansion in soya production. Where only a few

years ago thick native forests filled the landscape, now all that stands between

Las Lajitas and the Andes shimmering on the horizon are green pastures sprouting

soya.

 

Satellite photos of the region show the dramatic change. Only 15 years ago the

area appeared from space as a lush green carpet, now it resembles a threadbare

rug covered with the spreading stains of soya plantations. The figures speak for

themselves: in 1971 soya was only farmed on 37,000 hectares; now the area

covered is more than 14m hectares and rising. Soya now occupies more land in

Argentina than all other crops added together, covering more than half the

country's arable land. It is predicted that 10,000 hectares of forest is being

lost every year - the equivalent of 20 football fields an hour. If this

continues, in five years' time the country's native forests will disappear

completely.

 

It is a scenario that is troubling conservationists. 'This is a precious habitat

that is home to many rare animals and plants. We are in danger of losing it all

in a race to feed European and Chinese chickens.,' says Emiliano Ezcurra of

Greenpeace. 'How many jaguars and toucans will have to be killed to feed Danish

pigs?'

 

But the campaigners are up against some of the world's most powerful

corporations who now control the market in soya. In the mid-Nineties, with

Argentina facing an economic crisis, Monsanto stepped in with an offer of

salvation. Its message: plant our genetically modified Roundup Ready soya beans

that are much easier to grow than conventional soya and the money will flow in.

And so it happened. For the lucky few it has indeed been a godsend. A handful of

soya barons are making handsome profits and the government of Argentina is

enjoying improved tax revenues from exporting their soya to Europe and China.

 

But for many others, the drive to cover every spare hectare with soya comes at a

high price. More than 200 miles north of Las Lajitas is the small rural

Argentinian village of Pizarro. Carlo Odonez and his family run the main store.

He was made redundant from the country's largest oil company a few years back

and, with his payoff, brought his family to Pizarro with the dream of being an

organic beekeeper. Yet all around the village, protected forest - where he hoped

to keep his hives - is being destroyed to plant soya. The community of peasant

farmers that has lived off this land for generations rearing cattle, pigs and

chickens as well as producing cheese will soon be forced from their homes with

nowhere to go.

 

'Nobody can see a future in staying here,' says Odonez, as he explains how the

loss of trees will lead to flooding and changes in the local climate. Local

people are also afraid of the mists of chemicals they have heard are sprayed on

the soya.

 

'We hear many stories from other communities who have lived near the soya

plantations,' said Odonez. 'Some say they have become ill from breathing in the

chemicals they spray. Also we hear some have skin diseases.'

 

Worst hit by the land clearances are the indigenous tribes that have lived for

thousands of years in the forests. The Wichi people are an aboriginal group who

still rely on a hunter-gatherer lifestyle. They use their dogs to hunt wild boar

in the forests and collect four different types of honey from hollows in the

trees. They make baskets and bags from local plants and use forest flora as a

source of traditional medicine to cure their sick. Now they face extinction as

their tribal lands are ripped apart.

 

A mile from one of their encampments the latest deforestation is occurring.

Giant bulldozers linked together with huge metal chains drive through the

forests literally tearing up everything in their path. The felled timber and

leaves are piled high in 1km rows as far as the eye can see, ready to be set

alight. It is hard for these people to understand the destruction of a habitat

they have lived in harmony with for so long. 'Why is the white man destroying

our lands?' asks one of the tribal chiefs. It is difficult to explain that it's

to be used to feed animals in Europe and China.

 

If Argentina's soya revolution brought local economic benefits, perhaps there

would be less hostility. But the genius of Monsanto's Roundup Ready soya is that

it allows the crop to be farmed intensively with minimal labour. Only one worker

is needed for every 400 hectares compared to more than 70 on a traditional

citrus farm. By inserting a special gene into the plant's DNA, Monsanto's

scientists discovered they could make it immune to a very powerful herbicide

called glyphosate. Farmers can then spray this over their crops once or twice a

year and everything but the soya is exterminated leaving the soya to grow

vigorously with highly profitable yields and little maintenance. So more than

300,000 farmworkers have lost their jobs. Most head towards the big cities like

Buenos Aires or Salta to find work, but with few skills they end up unemployed

and homeless.

 

The story of the soya boom in South America, is not just limited to the GM

revolution in Argentina. While other countries have not embraced Monsanto's

beans with such gusto, such is the rush to cash in on the green gold that

similar scenarios are being played out in Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia. The

marketing men have even dubbed the region the Republic of Soya.

 

For Brazil the environmental consequences of non-GM soya have been as dramatic

as in Argentina. Newly released satellite imaging data has revealed a 40 per

cent jump in deforestation in Brazil's Amazon rainforests. The massive leap is

the worst acceleration in the loss of tropical jungle since 1995, with much of

the destruction being blamed on the illegal logging of land for soya production.

 

Unlike Argentina, the majority of soya crops grown in Brazil are GM-free,

although parts of southern Brazil are becoming contaminated with transgenic

plants as farmers smuggle Monsanto seeds across the borders in the belief that

they are more lucrative.

 

In September, the World Wide Fund for Nature published a detailed report on the

impact of soya expansion in South America. It makes depressing reading. The WWF

calculates that nearly 22 million hectares of forests and savannah in South

America - an area about the size of Great Britain - will have been wiped out by

2020. It says the crop has triggered soil erosion, siltation of waterways,

widespread use of toxic chemicals and pesticides and road building through some

of the world's most delicate habitats.

 

On the main road heading out of Las Lajitas, the slogan emblazoned on the giant

advertising billboard reads ' mejor agriculture, mejor futuro ' which translates

as 'better farming, better future'. For many of the people in South America, it

is a promise that rings hollow.

 

'Inside the soya bean you'll find the power to feed a family and feed the world.

You'll find the ability to improve health and combat diseases. You'll find a

unique combination of properties that makes the soya bean as important to animal

nutrition and industry as it is to human health. In short, you'd find the magic

in the magic bean.'

 

This is the world according to a brochure published by US multinational Archer

Daniel Midlands, one of the handful of corporations along with Monsanto that

today controls the multi-billion dollar soya industry. Others include Cargill,

Bunge and Louis Dreyfuss.

 

Every weekday morning at 8.30am the bell rings at the Chicago Board of Trade to

announce the beginning of the day's action. Dozens of brokers, wearing their

famous bright-coloured jackets,wave their arms in a frenzy, trying to make big

bucks for their investment clients on guessing what will be the future price of

soya.

 

Today soya is traded as an international commodity, just like oil or gold.

Depending on estimates of weather patterns, demand for animal food or general

geopolitical pressures the price will rise or fall. By the end of the day

millions will have been made or lost on these minute fluctuations.

 

With so many commercial interests dependent on the continued appetite for soya

across the globe, those few telling a different story face an uphill struggle in

getting their voice heard.

 

Perhaps the most graphic illustration of this was in the US three years ago.

After a huge lobbying effort from the soya industry, the US Food and Drug

Administration agreed to issue a health claim that eating 25g of soya protein a

day can help lower cholesterol and thus reduce the risk of heart disease. This

was a view later backed by Britain's Food Standards Agency.

 

With heart disease one of the biggest killers in the West, this is clearly a

major benefit for soya and has allowed many food companies to stamp labels on

soya products claiming they help reduce cholesterol. In such a health and

diet-obsessed culture this has been a big boost for the soya industry. However,

it is very difficult for any individual to eat the necessary 25g a day of soya -

this is equivalent to five soya yoghurts or three large glasses of soya milk.

 

Yet for two senior food scientists who worked within the US Food and Drug

Administration, the official backing of the health claim - which ignored the

impact of plant-oestrogens in soya - was potentially dangerous. In a highly

unusual move Dr Daniel Sheehan and Dr Daniel Doerge wrote a letter of protest to

the department of Health and Human Services at the FDA denouncing the claim,

concerned that the problems of soya consumption were being ignored.

 

An extract from their letter seen by Observer Food Monthly states: 'We oppose

this health claim because there is abundant evidence that some of the

isoflavones [phytoestrogens] found in soy demonstrate toxicity in

oestrogen-sensitive tissues and in the thyroid. This is true for a number of

species, including humans. Additionally, the adverse effects in humans occur in

several tissues and, apparently, by several distinct mechanisms...Thus, during

pregnancy in humans, isoflavones per se could be a risk factor for abnormal

brain and reproductive tract development.'

 

It added: 'There exists a significant body of animal data that demonstrates

goitrogenic [effect on the thyroid gland] and even carcinogenic effects of soy

products.'

 

Sheehan was particularly concerned about the increasing number of babies been

weaned on soya infant formula. 'We are doing a large uncontrolled and

unmonitored experiment on human infants,' he said.

 

OFM contacted the scientists but was told they are not allowed to comment

publicly on the health risks of soya. Doerge suggested speaking to another

expert Dr Bill Helferich, a professor of food at the University of Illinois who

has discovered a possible link between the growth of certain breast cancer

tumours that require oestrogen and the chemicals found in soya. Helferich was

unwilling to comment on whether a woman at risk of such a cancer should stop

eating soya products. But, when asked what the health implications were of

increasing amounts of soya in the Western diet, he told OFM : 'It's like

roulette. We just don't know.'

 

It is not just across the Atlantic that the increased consumption of soya has

concerned authorities. In Britain, the Food Standards Agency commissioned a

report from its Committee on Toxicity of Chemicals in Food to look at the issue.

Published in May 2003, and titled Phytoestrogens and Health, the cover of this

400-page tome is illustrated with a soya plant.

 

In its introduction the report states: 'In 1940 adverse effects on fertility

were observed in animals that had been graz ing on phytoestrogen-rich plants. In

the early 1980s it became clear that phytoestrogens could produce biological

effects in humans.'

 

What follows is a highly complex and comprehensive analysis of every scientific

study ever carried out on the subject of plant oestrogens. The scope is immense:

interaction with immune systems, central nervous systems, thyroid glands and

cardiovascular systems. It analyses evidence for and against the impact of these

soya chemicals on breast cancer, prostate cancer, stomach cancer, colorectal

cancer and lung cancer.

 

The findings are inconclusive. Some case studies find soya reduces the risk of

one cancer, but possibly increases the risk of another.

 

Professor Frank Woods was the chair man of the working group that produced this

report. He is one of the country's leading toxologists and has been a key

government adviser. If anybody can be called an expert on soya, it is him. Yet

even he will not be drawn on whether the increase in soya in Western diets is

good or bad. 'We still have a lot to learn,' he said. There is, however, one

area where his mind is made up. 'If my daughter ever asked me advice on whether

she should feed her baby on soya formula, I would say no, unless her doctor had

specifically advised her to do so.' Even if the the baby had an allergy to dairy

products, he believes that other options, such as hydrolysed cow's milk protein,

are safer.

 

'Soya has been eaten for thousands of years as a mainstay of Asian diets,' said

Dominic Dyer of Britain's Soya Protein Association. 'There is no evidence of

reduced fertility in these populations or an increased risk in any other of

these problems allegedly related to soya. Indeed the opposite is true. They are

healthier, live longer and have less chance of dying from diseases like breast

cancer.'

 

This is a powerful argument in soya's favour but scientists such as Professor

Woods, who studied this issue as part of the FSA's report, says it is far more

complex than just attributing these facts to the intake of soya in their diets.

 

US nutritionist Kaayla T Daniel who has studied the history of soya consumption

dismisses the comparison, arguing that the soya eaten in China and Japan, such

as tofu and miso, is very different from the industrially processed variety used

in today's Western food. 'Claims that soya beans have been a major part of the

Asian diet for more than 3,000 years, or from " time immemorial " are simply not

true,' she said.

 

The soya bean originated in China, and according to Daniel the ancient Chinese

called it 'the yellow jewel' but used it as 'green manure' to enrich the soil

for growing other crops. She says soya did not become a staple human food until

late in the Chou Dynasty in 1134 BC when the Chinese developed a fermentation

process to turn the bean into a paste best know by its Japanese name miso. The

liquid poured off during this production of miso is what is known as soya sauce.

She claims that the traditional process of making fermented soya products like

tofu or tempeh destroys many of the allegedly dangerous chemicals in soya,

unlike modern factory methods used today.

 

For Daniel, environmentalists and a growing number of scientists, the point is

not that soya is all bad but that neither is it the cure-all for many Western

ills. And there is certainly no escaping its environmental impact.

 

antony.barnett

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