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Independent Science Panel

Report On GM In Food

Independent Science Panel Report On GM In Food

 

From Sheryl Jackson

moonfyre1

6-5-3

 

 

Everyone is allergic to the GM foods, it comes out as depression, anger,

memory loss, confusion, nerve tics, aches and pains in joints and muscles,

brain, breast, pancreatic, bladder, gallbladder, liver, kidney and colon

cancers. The cancer index for adults and children have risen several

thousand times in the last several years. As in 5000% increase. Think

about that for a minute. The antennas of the microwaves, and EMF's, cell

phones, Frankenfoods, polluted air, water, and land.

 

In two hundred years we have pushed MotherEarth to the brink of disaster.

And people who can see the evidence of all of this still backstroke down

denial. When people deny the evidence they can see and taste they are

beyond unreachable. They are sleeping away and will only awaken when the

Doctor tells them I have good news and bad news. The good news is cancer,

the bad news is, it is too late. Sorry.

 

Sheryl

 

GM - Summary Of Independent Science Panel Report

 

The Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability

www.i-sis.org.uk

 

 

Independent Science Panel Report

June 15, 2003

 

The Case for a GM-Free Sustainable World - A Summary

 

Why GM-Free?

 

1. GM crops failed to deliver promised benefits

 

No increase in yields or significant reduction in herbicide and pesticide

use

United States lost an estimated $12 billion over GM crops amid worldwide

rejection

Massive crop failures of up to 100% reported in India

High risk future for agbiotech: " Monsanto could be another disaster

waiting to happen for investors "

 

2. GM crops posing escalating problems on the farm

 

Transgenic lines unstable: " most cases of transgene inactivation never

reach the literature "

Triple herbicide-tolerant volunteers and weeds emerged in North America

Glyphosate-tolerant weeds plague GM cotton and soya fields, atrazine back

in use

Bt biopesticide traits threatening to create superweeds and bt-resistant

pests

 

3. Extensive transgenic contamination unavoidable

 

Extensive transgenic contamination found in maize landraces in remote

regions of Mexico

32 out of 33 commercial seed stocks found contaminated in Canada

Pollen remains airborne for hours, and a 35 mile per hour wind speed is

unexceptional

There can be no co-existence of GM and non-GM crops

 

4. GM crops not safe

 

GM crops have not been proven safe: regulation was fatally flawed from the

start

The principle of 'substantial equivalence', vague and ill defined, gave

companies complete licence in claiming GM products 'substantially

equivalent' to non-GM, and hence 'safe'

 

5. GM food raises serious safety concerns

 

Despite the paucity of credible studies, existing findings raise serious

safety concerns

'Growth-factor-like' effects in the stomach and small intestine of young

rats were attributed to the transgenic process or the transgenic construct,

and may hence be general to all GM food

 

6. Dangerous gene products are incorporated into food crops

 

Bt proteins, incorporated into 25% of all GM crops worldwide, are harmful

to many non-target insects, and some are potent immunogens and allergens

for humans and other mammals

Food crops are increasingly used to produce pharmaceuticals and drugs,

including cytokines known to suppress the immune system, or linked to

dementia, neurotoxicity and mood and cognitive side effects; vaccines and

viral sequences such as the ÔspikeÕ protein gene of the pig coronavirus,

in the same family as the SARS virus linked to the current epidemic; and

glycoprotein gene gp120 of the AIDS virus that could interfere with the

immune system and recombine with viruses and bacteria to generate new and

unpredictable pathogens.

 

7. Terminator crops spread male sterility

 

Crops engineered with 'suicide' genes for male sterility, promoted as a

means of preventing the spread of transgenes, actually spread both male

sterility and herbicide tolerance traits via pollen.

 

8. Broad-spectrum herbicides highly toxic to humans and other species

 

Glufosinate ammonium and glyphosate, used with herbicide tolerant GM crops

that currently account for 75% of all GM crops worldwide, are both

systemic metabolic poisons

Glufosinate ammonium is linked to neurological, respiratory,

gastrointestinal and haematological toxicities, and birth defects in

humans and mammals; also toxic to butterflies and a number of beneficial

insects, to larvae of clams and oysters, Daphnia and some freshwater fish,

especially the rainbow trout; it inhibits beneficial soil bacteria and

fungi, especially those that fix nitrogen.

Glyphosate is the most frequent cause of complaints and poisoning in the

UK, and disturbances to many body functions have been reported after

exposures at normal use levels; glyphosate exposure nearly doubled the

risk of late spontaneous abortion, and children born to users of

glyphosate had elevated neurobehavioral defects; glyphosate retards

development of the foetal skeleton in laboratory rats, inhibits the

synthesis of steroids, and is genotoxic in mammals, fish and frogs; field

dose exposure of earthworms caused at least 50 percent mortality and

significant intestinal damage among surviving worms; Roundup (MonsantoÕs

formulation of glyphosate) caused cell division dysfunction that may be

linked to human cancers.

 

9. Genetic engineering creates super-viruses

 

The most insidious dangers of genetic engineering are inherent to the

process; it greatly enhances the scope and probability of horizontal gene

transfer and recombination, the main route to creating viruses and

bacteria that cause disease epidemics.

Newer techniques, such as DNA shuffling, allow geneticists to create in a

matter of minutes in the laboratory millions of recombinant viruses that

have never existed in billions of years of evolution

Disease-causing viruses and bacteria and their genetic material are the

predominant materials and tools of genetic engineering, as much as for the

intentional creation of bio-weapons.

 

10. Transgenic DNA in food taken up by bacteria in human gut

 

Transgenic DNA from plants has been taken up by bacteria both in the soil

and in the gut of human volunteers; antibiotic resistance marker genes can

spread from transgenic food to pathogenic bacteria, making infections very

difficult to treat.

 

11. Transgenic DNA and cancer

 

Transgenic DNA known to survive digestion in the gut and to jump into the

genome of mammalian cells, raising the possibility for triggering cancer

Feeding GM products such as maize to animals may carry risks, not just for

the animals but also for human beings consuming the animal products

 

12. CaMV 35S promoter increases horizontal gene transfer

 

Evidence suggests that transgenic constructs with the CaMV 35S promoter

could be especially unstable and prone to horizontal gene transfer and

recombination, with all the attendant hazards: gene mutations due to

random insertion, cancer, re-activation of dormant viruses and generation

of new viruses.

 

13. A history of misrepresentation and suppression of scientific evidence

 

There has been a history of misrepresentation and suppression of

scientific evidence, especially on horizontal gene transfer. Key

experiments failed to be performed, or were performed badly and then

misrepresented. Many experiments were not followed up, including

investigations on whether the CaMV 35S promoter is responsible for the

'growth-factor-like' effects observed in young rats fed GM potatoes.

 

GM crops have failed to deliver the promised benefits and are posing

escalating problems on the farm. Transgenic contamination is now widely

acknowledged to be unavoidable, and hence there can be no co-existence of

GM and non-GM agriculture. Most important of all, GM crops have not been

proven safe. On the contrary, sufficient evidence has emerged to raise

serious safety concerns, that if ignored could result in irreversible

damage to health and the environment. GM crops should therefore be firmly

rejected now.

 

Why Sustainable Agriculture?

 

1. Higher productivity and yields especially in the Third World

 

8.98 million farmers adopted sustainable agriculture practices on 28.92

million hectares in Asia, Latin America and Africa; reliable data from 89

projects show higher productivity and yields: 50-100% increase in yield

for rainfed crops, and 5-10% for irrigated crops; top successes include

Burkina Faso, which turned a cereal deficit of 644 kg per year to an

annual surplus of 153 kg, Ethiopia, where 12 500 households enjoyed 60%

increase in crop yields, and Honduras and Guatemala, where 45 000 families

increased yields from 400-600 kg/ha to 2,000-2,500 kg/ha

Long-term studies in industrialised countries show yields for organic

comparable to conventional agriculture, and often higher

 

2. Better soils

 

Sustainable agricultural practices reduce soil erosion, improve soil

physical structure and water-holding capacity, which are crucial in

averting crop failures during periods of drought

Soil fertility maintained or increased by various sustainable agriculture

practices

Biological activity higher in organic soils: more earthworms, arthropods,

mycorrhizal and other fungi, and micro-organisms, all beneficial for

nutrient recycling and suppression of disease

 

3. Cleaner environment

 

Little or no polluting chemical inputs with sustainable agriculture

Less nitrate and phosphorus leached to groundwater from organic soils

Better water infiltration rates in organic systems, therefore less prone

to erosion and less likely to contribute to water pollution from surface

runoff

 

4. Reduced pesticides and no increase in pests

 

Integrated pest management cut the number of pesticide sprays in Vietnam

from 3.4 to one per season, in Sri Lanka from 2.9 to 0.5 per season, and

in Indonesia from 2.9 to 1.1 per season

 

No increase in crop losses due to pest damage resulted from withdrawal of

synthetic insecticides in Californian tomato production

 

Pest control achievable without pesticides, reversing crop losses, as for

example, by using 'trap crops' to attract stem borer, a major pest in East

Africa

Supporting biodiversity and using diversity

 

Sustainable agriculture promotes agricultural biodiversity, which is

crucial for food security; organic farming can support much greater

biodiversity, benefiting species that have significantly declined

Integrated farming systems in Cuba are 1.45 to 2.82 times more productive

than monocultures

Thousands of Chinese rice farmers doubled yields and nearly eliminated the

most devastating disease simply by mixed planting of two varieties

Soil biodiversity enhanced by organic practices, bringing beneficial

effects such as recovery and rehabilitation of degraded soils, improved

soil structure and water infiltration.

Environmentally and economically sustainable

 

Research on apple production systems ranked the organic system first in

environmental and economic sustainability, the integrated system second

and the conventional system last; organic apples were most profitable due

to price premiums, quicker investment return, and fast recovery of costs

A Europe-wide study showed that organic farming performs better than

conventional farming in the majority of environmental indicators

A review by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

concluded that well-managed organic agriculture leads to more favourable

conditions at all environmental levels

Ameliorating climate change by reducing direct & indirect energy use

 

Organic agriculture uses energy much more efficiently and greatly reduces

CO2 emissions compared with conventional agriculture, both with respect to

direct energy consumption in fuel and oil and indirect consumption in

synthetic fertilizers and pesticides

Sustainable agriculture restores soil organic matter content, increasing

carbon sequestration below ground, thereby recovering an important carbon

sink

Organic agriculture is likely to emit less nitrous dioxide (N2O), another

important greenhouse gas and also a cause of stratospheric ozone depletion

Efficient, profitable production

 

Any yield reduction in organic agriculture more than offset by ecological

and efficiency gains

Smaller farms produce far more per unit area than larger farms

characteristic of conventional farming

Production costs for organic farming are often lower than conventional

farming, bringing equivalent or higher net returns even without organic

price premiums; when price premiums are factored in, organic systems are

almost always more profitable

Improved food security and benefits to local communities

 

A review of sustainable agriculture projects showed that average food

production per household increased by 1.71 tonnes per year (up 73%) for 4.

42 million farmers on 3.58 million hectares, bringing food security and

health benefits to local communities

Increasing productivity increases food supplies and raises incomes,

thereby reducing poverty, increasing access to food, reducing malnutrition

and improving health and livelihoods

Sustainable agricultural approaches draw extensively on traditional and

indigenous knowledge, and place emphasis on the farmersÕ experience and

innovation, thereby improving their status and autonomy, enhancing social

and cultural relations within local communities

For every £1 spent at an organic box scheme from Cusgarne Organics (UK), £

2.59 is generated for the local economy; but for every £1 spent at a

supermarket, only £1.40 is generated for the local economy

Better food quality for health

 

Organic food is safer, as organic farming prohibits pesticide use, so

harmful chemical residues are rarely found

Organic production bans the use of artificial food additives, such as

hydrogenated fats, phosphoric acid, aspartame and monosodium glutamate,

which have been linked to health problems as diverse as heart disease,

osteoporosis, migraines and hyperactivity

Studies have shown that on average, organic food has higher vitamin C,

higher mineral levels and higher plant phenolics - plant compounds that

can fight cancer and heart disease, and combat age-related neurological

dysfunctions - and significantly less nitrates, a toxic compound.

Sustainable agricultural practices have proven beneficial in all aspects

relevant to health and the environment. In addition, they bring food

security and social and cultural well being to local communities

everywhere. There is an urgent need for a comprehensive global shift to

all forms of sustainable agriculture.

 

 

The Independent Science Panel on GM Final Report

 

Dozens of prominent scientists from seven countries, spanning the

disciplines of agroecology, agronomy, biomathematics, botany, chemical

medicine, ecology, histopathology, microbial ecology, molecular genetics,

nutritional biochemistry, physiology, toxicology and virology, joined

forces to launch themselves as an Independent Science Panel on GM at a

public conference, attended by UK environment minister Michael Meacher and

200 other participants, in London on 10 May 2003.

 

The conference coincided with the publication of a draft report, The Case

for a GM-free Sustainable World, calling for a ban on GM crops to make way

for all forms of sustainable agriculture. This authoritative report,

billed as " the strongest, most complete dossier of evidence " ever compiled

on the problems and hazards of GM crops as well as the manifold benefits

of sustainable agriculture, is being finalised for release 15 June 2003.

 

Ahead of the release of the 120-page final report, the Independent Science

Panel is pleased to provide a four-page summary as its contribution to the

National GM Debate in the UK.

 

It is a challenge to the proponents of GM to answer the case presented,

rather than having to argue against the case for GM crops, which has yet

to be made.

 

Please circulate this document widely.

 

Members of the Independent Science Panel on GM

 

Prof. Miguel Altieri

Professor of Agroecology, University of California, Berkeley, USA

 

Dr. Michael Antoniou

Senior Lecturer in Molecular Genetics, GKT School of Medicine, King's

College, London.

 

Dr. Susan Bardocz

Biochemist, formerly Rowett Research Institute, Scotland

 

Prof. David Bellamy OBE

Internationally renowned botanist, environmentalist, broadcaster, author

and campaigner; recipient of number awards; President & Vice President of

many conservation and environmental organisations.

 

Dr. Elizabeth Bravo V.

Biologist, researcher and campaigner on biodiversity and GMO issues;

co-founder of Acci " n Ecol " gica; part-time lecturer at Universidad

Politcnica Salesiana, Ecuador.

 

Prof. Joe Cummins

Professor Emeritus of Genetics, University of Western Ontario, London,

Ontario, Canada.

 

Dr. Stanley Ewen

Consultant Histopathologist at Grampian University Hospitals Trust;

formerly Senior Lecturer in Pathology, University of Aberdeen; lead

histopathologist for the Grampian arm of the Scottish Colorectal Cancer

Screening Pilot Project.

 

Edward Goldsmith

Recipient of the Right Livelihood and numerous awards, environmentalist,

scholar, author and Founding Editor of The Ecologist.

 

Dr. Brian Goodwin

Scholar in Residence, Schumacher College, England.

 

Dr. Mae-Wan Ho

Co-founder and Director of the Institute of Science in Society; Editor of

Science in Society; Science Advisor to the Third World Network and on the

Roster of Experts for the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety; Visiting Reader,

Open University, UK and Visiting Professor of Organic Physics, Catania

University, Sicily, Italy.

 

Prof. Malcolm Hooper

Emeritus Professor at the University of Sunderland; previously, Professor

of Medicinal Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Sunderland

Polytechnic; Chief Scientific Advisor to the Gulf War Veterans.

 

Dr. Vyvyan Howard

Medically qualified toxico-pathologist, Developmental Toxico-Pathology

Group, Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Biology, The University of

Liverpool; Member of the UK Government's Advisory Committee on Pesticides.

 

Dr. Brian John

Geomorphologist and environmental scientist; Founder and long-time

Chairman of the West Wales Eco Centre; one of the coordinating group of GM

Free Cymru

 

Prof. Marijan Josÿt

Professor of Plant Breeding and Seed Production, Agricultural College

Krizÿevci, Croatia.

 

Lim Li Ching

Researcher, Institute of Science in Society and Third World Network;

deputy-editor of Science in Society.

 

Dr. Eva Novotny

Astronomer and campaigner on GM issues for Scientists for Global

Responsibility, SGR

 

Prof. Bob Orskov OBE

Head of the International Feed Resource Unit in Macaulay Institute,

Aberdeen, Scotland; Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, FRSE; Fellow

of the Polish Academy of Science.

 

Dr. Michel Pimbert

Agricultural ecologist and Principal Associate, International Institute

for Environment and Development.

 

Dr. Arpad Pusztai

Private consultant; formerly Senior Research Fellow at the Rowett Research

Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland.

 

David Quist

Microbial ecologist, Ecosystem Science Division, Environmental Science,

Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, USA.

 

Dr. Peter Rosset

Agricultural ecologist and rural development specialist; Co-director of

the Institute for Food and Development Policy (Food First), Oakland,

California, USA.

 

Prof. Peter Saunders

Professor of Applied Mathematics at King's College, London.

 

Dr. Veljko Veljkovic

AIDS virologist, Center for Multidisciplinary Research and Engineering,

Institute of Nuclear Sciences, VINCA, Belgrade, Yugoslavia.

 

Roberto Verzola

Secretary-General, Philippine Greens, Member of the Board of Trustees,

PABINHI (a sustainable agriculture network), Coordinator, SRI-Pilipinas

(network of advocates for the System of Rice Intensification).

 

Dr. Gregor Wolbring

Biochemist, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Adjunct Assistant

Professor for bioethical issues, University of Calgary; Adjunct Assistant

Professor, University of Alberta; Founder and Executive Director,

International Center for Bioethics, Culture and Disability; Founder and

Coordinator, International Network on Bioethics and Disability

 

Prof. Oscar B. Zamora

Professor of Agronomy, Department of Agronomy, University of the

Philippines Los Banos-College of Agriculture (UPLB-CA), College, Laguna,

The Philippines.

 

 

 

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at http://www.i-sis.org.uk/

ispr-summary.php

 

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I actually thought that there was a glimmer of hope yesterday. I walked

into an area and heard three male employees discussing the gigantic " car "

now being marked as the " Hummer " . They expressed amazement that any one

would plop down $50,000 for a huge gas sucking box. Then one of the said,

" I can't imagine how a person can come to believe that they need

something like that. You can gat along with any four wheel drive pickup

truck! "

 

I almost cried.

 

--Dan Waltimire

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