from: http://www.mercola.com/blog  

Five Reasons to Avoid Genetically Modified Crops   

This is a topic I have frequently discussed. Now The
Ecologist, published in London, and the world's longest
running environmental magazine, vigorously opposes GM foods.
It is read by people in over 150 countries. 

The August issue has a lengthy article (posted below) titled
"5 Reasons To Keep Britain GM-Free." Although it discusses
genetically engineered crops from Britain's perspective, the
points it makes are applicable to any country. The five
reasons are: 


  GM Will Remove Consumer Choice 

  Health Risks Have Not Been Disproved 

  Farmers Will be Destroyed 

  The Environment Will Suffer 

  GM Crops Will Not Feed The Poor  

One of the sub-topics under "Farmers Will be Destroyed" is
"Organic Farmers Ruined." Unfortunately, that is starting to
happen now in the United States as more and more organic
crops become contaminated with the genes from genetically
engineered crops. Over time, the new "USDA ORGANIC" label
may come to represent an inferior organic product compared
to organic crops from those countries that are not allowing
genetically engineered crops to be grown.


The fastest way to dramatically reduce the acreage of
genetically engineered crops being grown in the United
States is to pass mandatory labeling legislation. Once
genetically engineered foods are required to be labeled,
manufacturers will begin using non-genetically engineered
ingredients. And if food manufacturers stop buying
genetically engineered crops, farmers will stop growing
them. It is the basic law of supply and demand. Remove the
demand, and the supply will quickly go away. 

The Economist August 2003   

=========================================================
from: http://www.theecologist.org/article.html?article=432 

 5 reasons to keep Britain GM-free  

The Ecologist spells out the five overriding reasons why the
commercialisation of GM crops should never be allowed in the
UK 

1. GM WILL REMOVE CONSUMER CHOICE   

The UK government's official adviser on GM, the Agriculture
and Environment Biotechnology Commission (AEBC), has said it
would `be difficult and in some places impossible to
guarantee' that any British food was GM-free if commercial
growing of GM crops went ahead. In North America, farmers
can no longer be certain the seed they plant does not
contain GM genes. 

GM CROPS CONTAMINATE   

Cross pollination   

GM genes are often `dominant' - ie, they are inherited at
the expense of non-GM genes when cross-pollination occurs
between GM and conventional species. With the first GM crops
considered for commercialisation - oilseed rape and sugar
beet and maize - the `gene flow' (ability to contaminate
non-GM varieties) is `high' and `medium to high',
respectively. 

To prevent cross-pollination, the official advice in the UK
is that there should be a separation distance of just 50
metres between GM oilseed rape and non-GM varieties. But
pollen can travel a lot further than that. Bees, for
example, regularly fly for up to 10 kilometres; hence,
oilseed rape pollen has been found in hives 4.5 kilometres
from the nearest GM crop field. Tree pollen grains have been
recorded in the essentially treeless Shetland Isles, which
are 250 kilometres from the nearest mainland. And the
University of Adelaide has published research into wind
pollination distances that shows oilseed rape pollen can
travel for up to 3 kilometres. 

SEED MIXING AND SPILLAGE   

GM seed, or parts of GM root crops like sugar beet, may be
shed and left in a field where they may grow later. 

Combine harvesters move from field to field, and leftover GM
seed may be spilt if equipment is not cleaned properly. 

 Lorries removing a harvested crop from a farm may spill
seed near fields where non-GM or organic crops are grown. 

 For crops with very small seeds like oilseed rape spillage
can be high.In May 2002 the European Commission's Joint
Research Centre (JRC) echoed the AEBC almost verbatim when
it warned that if GM crops were widely adopted, preventing
contamination of organic food would be `very difficult and
connected to high costs, or virtually impossible'. 

The biotech industry is fully aware of this. As Don
Westfall, vice president of US food industry consultancy
Promar International, says: `The hope of the [GM] industry
is that over time the market is so flooded [with GM] that
there's nothing you can do about it. You just surrender.' 

 Likewise, the Soil Association's investigation into the
impact of GM in the US concludes: `All non-GM farmers in
North America are finding it very hard or impossible to grow
GM-free crops. Seeds have become almost completely
contaminated with GM organisms (GMOs), good non-GM varieties
have become hard to buy, and there is a high risk of crop
contamination.' 

2. HEALTH RISKS HAVE NOT BEEN DISPROVED   

Pro-GM voices claim that after six years there have been no
adverse health effects from eating GM foods in the US. But
then, there has been no effort by the US authorities to look
for health impacts either. 

GM APPROVAL SYSTEMS LAX   

Safety data comes from the biotech firms themselves.
Independent, peer-reviewed research showing that GM food
poses no danger to human health is not required. One
Monsanto director said: `[We] should not have to vouchsafe
the safety of biotech food. Our interest is in selling as
much of it as possible.' 

`Substantial equivalence'  The common methodology for
government food-safety requirements in North America and
Europe has traditionally been a comparison between a food
and a conventional counterpart. The assumption is that
existing foods have a long history of safe use. So, if a GM
crop is found to be `the same' as a non-GM counterpart, it
can claim this history. This is called `substantial
equivalence'. But GM crops are not the same, because of the
random nature and uncertain consequences of modification.
Biotech firms acknowledge this when it suits them - stating,
for example, that their GM varieties are distinctive enough
to warrant their own patents. 

There have been no properly controlled clinical trials
looking at the effects of short- or long-term ingestion of
GM foods by humans. Moreover, as Dr Arpad Pusztai (who was
sacked when he printed research about the effects of GM
potatoes on lab rats) warns: `There is increasing research
to show they may actually be very unsafe.' 

THREE MAJOR CONCERNS   

Allergic reactions  Genetic modification frequently uses
proteins from organisms that have never before been an
integral part of the human food chain. Hence, GM food may
cause unforeseen allergic reactions - particularly among
children. Allergens could be transferred from foods to which
people are allergic to foods they think are safe. When a new
food is introduced, it takes five to six years before any
allergies are recognised. 

In 2000 GM `StarLink' maize was found in taco shells being
sold for human consumption in the US - even though the maize
had only been approved for animal feed. StarLink is modified
to contain a toxin that could be a human allergen; it is
heat stable and does not break down in gastric acid -
characteristics shared by many allergens. 

Antibiotic resistance  Genetic modification could also make
disease-causing bacteria resistant to antibiotics. This
could lead to potentially uncontrollable epidemics.
Antibiotic-resistance genes are used as `markers' in GM
crops to identify which plant cells have successfully
incorporated the desired foreign genes during modification. 

 A 2002 study commissioned by the UK's Food Standards Agency
(FSA) showed that antibiotic-resistance marker genes from GM
foods can make their way into human gut bacteria after just
one meal (see box below). Two years previously, the British
Medical Association had warned: `The risk to human health
from antibiotic resistance developing in micro-organisms is
one of the major public health threats that will be faced in
the 21st century.' 

Industrial and pharmaceutical crops  Since 1991 over 300
open-field trials of `pharma' crops have taken place around
the world. In California, for example, GM rice containing
human genes has been grown for drug production.
Pharmaceutical wheat, corn and barley are also being
developed in the US, France and Canada. 

Last year in Texas 500,000 bushels of soya destined for
human consumption were contaminated with genes from maize
genetically modified by the US firm Prodigene so as to
create a vaccine for a stomach disease afflicting pigs. A
major concern is that GM firms are using commodity food
crops for pharm-aceutical production. If there were such
thing as a responsible path with `pharma' GM it would be to
use non-food crops. 

3. FARMERS WILL BE DESTROYED   

Within a few years of the introduction of GM crops in North
America the following occurred: 

Almost all of the US's $300m annual maize exports and
Canada's $300m annual rape exports to the EU disappeared; 

 The trade for Canadian honey was almost completely
destroyed because of GM contamination;   

Asian countries, including Japan and South Korea - the
biggest foreign buyers of US maize, stopped importing North
American maize; 

Just like domestic consumers, food companies - including
Heinz, Gerber and Frito-Lay - started to reject the use of
GMOs in their products. 

Former White House agriculture expert Dr Charles Benbrook
calculates that the lost export trade and fall in farm
prices caused by GM commercialisation led to an increase in
annual government subsidies of an estimated $3-5 billion. 

 In December 2000 the president of Canada's National Farmers
Union, Cory Ollikka, said: `Farmers are really starting to
question the profit-enhancing ability of products that seem
to be shutting them out of markets worldwide.' 

Farm, which represents UK farmers, has said: `Farmers are
being asked by the agro-biotech companies to shoulder the
economic and public-image risks of their new technology, for
which there appear to be few or no compensating benefits.
The claimed cost savings are either non-existent or
exaggerated. The long-term health and environmental impacts
are still uncertain. And consumers don't want to eat GM
food. So why would farmers sow something they can't sell?' 

 HIGHER COSTS, REDUCED PROFITS   

The Soil Association's US investigations found that GM crops
have increased the cost of farming and reduced farmers'
profits for the following reasons: 

1- GM varieties increase farmer seed costs by up to 40 per
cent an acre; GM soya and maize, which make up 83 per cent
of the GM crops grown worldwide, `deliver less income on
average to farmers than non-GM crops'; 

2- GM varieties require farmers to pay biotech firms a
`technology fee'; 

3- The GM companies forbid farmers to save their seeds for
replanting; contrary to traditional practice, farmers have
to buy new seed each year; and 

4- GM herbicide-tolerant crops increase farmers' use of
expensive herbicides, especially as new weed problems have
emerged - rogue herbicide-resistant oilseed rape plants
being a widespread problem; contrary to the claim that only
one application would be needed, farmers are applying
herbicides several times. 

Even a 2002 report by the US Department of Agriculture, a
key ally of the biotech industry, admitted that the economic
benefits of cultivating GM crops were `variable' and that
farmers growing GM Bt corn were actually `losing money.' 

 LOWER YIELDS   

The University of Nebraska recorded yields for Monsanto's
Roundup Ready GM maize that were 6-11 per cent less than
those for non-GM soya varieties. A 1998 study of over 8,000
field trials found that Roundup Ready soya seeds produced
between 6.7 and 10 per cent fewer bushels of soya than
conventional varieties. 

Trials by the UK's National Institute of Agricultural Botany
showed yields of GM oilseed rape and sugar beet that were
5-8 per cent less than conventional varieties. 

CORPORATE CONTROL GROWS   

Adopting GM crops would place farmers and the food chain
itself under the control of a handful of multinational
corporations such as Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer and DuPont.
For US farmers this has meant: 

1- Legally-binding agreements that force farmers to purchase
expensive new seeds from the biotech corporations each
season; 

2- Having to buy these corporations' herbicides (at a cost
considerably above that of a generic equivalent) for
herbicide-tolerant crops; 

3- Paying the biotech firms a technology fee based on the
acreage of land under GM; 

4- The development of so-called `traitor technology' crops
on which particular chemicals will have to be applied if the
crops' GM characteristics (such as their time of flowering
or disease resistance) are to show; 

5- The invention of `terminator technology' that stops GM
plants producing fertile seeds; thus farmers are physically
prevented from sowing saved seed and have to buy new seed
from the biotech firms instead; and 

6- Biotech firms buying up seed companies. This creates
monopolies and limits farmers' choices still further. DuPont
and Monsanto are now the two largest seed companies in the
world. As a result of their control of the seed industry,
farmers are reporting that the availability of good non-GM
seed varieties is rapidly disappearing. 

PRISONERS TO GM   

US farmers are obliged by their contracts to allow biotech
company inspectors onto their farms. As with all crops,
leftover seed from GM plants can germinate in fields since
used to grow different crops; the seeds produce so-called
`volunteers'. If biotech company inspectors find any such
plants, they can claim - and have repeatedly done so - that
the farmers are growing unlicensed crops and infringing
patent rights. For example, David Chaney, who farms in
Kentucky, had to pay Monsanto $35,000; another Kentucky
farmer agreed to pay the firm $25,000; and three Iowa
farmers are on record as having paid it $40,000 each. These
and other farmers have also had to sign gagging orders and
agree to allow Monsanto complete access to their land in
subsequent years. Crops have also been destroyed and seed
confiscated. The biotech industry currently has legal
actions pending against 550 farmers in North America. 

ORGANIC FARMERS RUINED   

Internationally, the organic movement has rejected GM
because of its potential for genetic contamination and its
continued reliance on artificial chemicals.  The Soil
Association reports that in North America `many organic
farmers have been unable to sell their produce as organic
due to contamination'. Contamination has already: 

1- meant the loss, at a potential cost of millions of
dollars, of almost the entire organic oilseed rape sector of
Saskatchewan; 

2- cost US organic maize growers $90m in annual income (the
losses were calculated by the Union of Concerned Scientists
in an analysis for the US Environmental Protection Agency);
and 

3- forced many organic farmers to give up trying to grow
certain crops altogether. Last month a survey by the Organic
Farming Research Foundation found that one in 12 US organic
farmers had already suffered direct costs or damage because
of GM contamination. 

4- If commercial planting of GM crops took place in Britain,
the UK's burgeoning organic sector - now worth £900m, and
set to increase with (supposed) government support - would
perish. If, by some miracle, contamination could be avoided
the costs involved would inevitably lead to organic farmers
going bust. A study published by the JRC in May predicted
that efforts to protect conventional and organic crops from
contamination would add 41 per cent to the cost of producing
non-GM oilseed rape and up to 9 per cent to the cost of
producing non-GM maize and potatoes. 

4. THE ENVIRONMENT WILL SUFFER   

INCREASED USE OF HERBICIDES   

The proponents of GM argue that the technology will lead to
a reduction in the use of chemical weedkillers. But for the
majority of GM crops grown so far, the evidence does not
bear this out. 

Four years worth of data from the US Department of
Agriculture shows herbicide use on Roundup Ready soya beans
is increasing. 

In 1998 total herbicide use on GM soya beans in six US
states was 30 per cent greater on average than on
conventional varieties. 

The Soil Association's US investigation found that `the use
of GM crops is resulting in a reversion to the use of older,
more toxic compounds' such as the herbicide paraquat. 

WHY?   

Genes modified to make crops herbicide-resistant can be
transferred to related weeds, which would then also become
herbicide-resistant. 

Crops can themselves act like weeds. Because GM crops are
designed to have a greater ability to survive, leftover
seeds can germinate in later years when a different crop is
growing in the same field. The leftover volunteer plants
would then contaminate the new crop. In Canada, where GM
herbicide-tolerant oilseed rape has been grown since 1998,
oilseed rape weeds resistant to three different herbicides
have been created. These oilseed rape weeds are an example
of `gene-stacking' - the occurrence of several
genetically-engineered traits in a single plant.
Gene-stacking was found in all 11 GM sites investigated in a
Canadian ministry of agriculture study. As professor Martin
Entz of Winnipeg's University of Manitoba observes, `GM
oilseed rape is absolutely impossible to control'. 

Following a review of the Canadian experience, English
Nature - the UK government's advisory body on biodiversity -
predicted: `Herbicide-tolerant gene-stacked volunteers of
oilseed rape would be inevitable in practical agriculture in
the UK.' 

INCREASED USE OF PESTICIDES   

There has also been an increase in pesticide use by farmers
attempting to cope with pest resistance created by GM Bt
crops. Bt crops are modified to produce the insecticidal
toxin Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) in all their tissues. 

However, the World Bank says insects can adapt to Bt within
`one or two years'. And scientists at China's Nanjing
Institute of Environmental Sciences have concluded that if
it was planted continuously Bt cotton would probably lose
all its resistance to bollworm - the pest it is designed to
control - within eight to 10 years. 

Meanwhile, pests' adaptability to pest-resistant GM crops
could force farmers onto a `genetic treadmill' of ever more
technical biotech fixes (including new varieties of
pest-resistant crops) and more frequent spraying, and more
toxic doses, of chemical pesticides. It could also destroy
the effectiveness of Bt as a natural insecticide in organic
agriculture. 

Perversely, GM pest-resistant crops could make agriculture
more vulnerable to pests and disease; they could end up
harming beneficial soil micro-organisms and insects like
ladybirds and lacewings that keep certain pest populations
in check. 

The Delhi-based Research Foundation for Science, Technology
and Ecology found in a study of four Indian states that `not
only did Monsanto's Bt cotton not protect plants from the
American bollworm, but there was an increase of 250-300 per
cent in attacks by non-target pests like jassids, aphids,
white fly and thrips'. And researchers at Cornell University
in the US found that the pollen from Bt corn was poisonous
to the larvae of monarch butterflies. 

As GM `pest-resistant' crops fail to deliver, Australian
farmers have been advised to spray additional insecticide on
Monsanto's Bt cotton by the Transgenic and Insect Management
Strategy Committee of the Australian Cotton Growers Research
Association. Overall insecticide applications on Bt maize
have also increased in the US. 

GENETIC POLLUTION   

GM crops may also reduce the diversity of plant life by
contaminating their wild relatives and indigenous crop
varieties in areas where the crops evolved. Widespread GM
contamination of conventional maize has already been
detected in Mexico. In Europe, contamination of wild
relatives of oilseed rape and sugar beet is considered
inevitable if GM commercialisation goes ahead. The same
applies to wild relatives of rice in Asia. 

IMPLICATION  If wildlife is harmed `unexpectedly' (ie,
without that harm having officially been predicted), and an
official risk assessment had not previously decided that GM
crops were safe, it is the state and society that will have
to pay for putting things right - if this is possible. 

5 GM CROPS WILL NOT FEED THE POOR   

The idea that GM will end global poverty is probably the
biggest of all the GM apologists' lies - the one used to
accuse anti-GM campaigners in rich countries of not caring
about the Third World. The truth is that the introduction of
GM crops into the developing world will result in decreased
yields, crop failures and the impoverishment of literally
billions of small farmers. 

DECREASED YIELDS   

As already statedon page 36, there is no evidence that
genetic modification increases yields. But, just to make the
point, consider the following: 

1- a US Department of Agriculture report published in May
2002 concluded that net yields of herbicide-tolerant soya
bean were no higher than those of non-GM soya, and that
yields of pest-resistant corn were actually lower than those
of non-GM corn; 

2- in September 2001, the state court of Mississippi ruled
that a Monsanto subsidiary's `high-yielding' GM soya seeds
were responsible for reduced yields obtained by Mississippi
farmer Newell Simrall; the farmer was awarded damages of
$165,742. 

But then, no commercial GM crop has ever been specifically
engineered to have a higher yield. 

CROP FAILURES   

Crop failures (and, therefore, drastically reduced yields)
have already occurred with GM soya and cotton plants in the
developing world. This is largely due to the unpredictable
behaviour of these crops. GM soya's brittleness, for
example, has made it incapable of surviving heat waves. And
in 2002 `massive failure' of Bt cotton was reported in the
southern states of India; consequently, in April the Indian
government denied Monsanto clearance for the cultivation of
its Bt cotton in India's northern states. 

THE RUIN OF SMALL FARMERS   

GM would force the two billion people who manage the
developing world's small family farms to stop their age-old
practice of saving seeds. Each year they will have to buy
expensive seeds and chemicals instead. The experience of
North American farmers shows that GM seeds cost up to 40 per
cent more than non-GM varieties. 

TECHNOFIXES DON'T WORK   

Inadequate yields are not the cause of hunger today. As
Sergey Vasnetsov, a biotech industry analyst with investment
bank Lehman Brothers, says: `Let's stop pretending we face
food shortages. There is hunger, but not food shortages.' In
1994, food production could have supplied 6.4 billion people
(more than the world's actual population) with an adequate
2,350 calories per day. Yet more than 1 billion people do
not get enough to eat. 

Furthermore, the type of GM crops being produced are almost
exclusively for the processed-food, textiles and animal-feed
markets of the West. Instead of being used to grow staple
foods for local consumption, millions of hectares of land in
the developing world are being set aside to grow GM corn,
for example, to supply grain for pigs, chicken and cattle.
In May, ActionAid published a report called GM Crops: going
against the grain, which revealed that `only 1 per cent of
GM research is aimed at [developing] crops [to be] used by
poor farmers in poor countries'. And ActionAid calculates
that those crops `stand only a one in 250 chance of making
it into farmers' fields'. As the UN Development Programme
points out, `technology is created in response to market
pressures - not the needs of poor people, who have little
purchasing power'. 

SUSTAINABLE ALTERNATIVES   

Sustainable agriculture projects have led to millet yields
rising by up to 154 per cent in India, millet and sorghum
yields rising by 275 per cent in Burkina Faso and maize
yields increasing by 300 per cent in Honduras. Combined with
reforms aimed at achieving more equitable land ownership,
protection from subsidised food imports and the
re-orientation of production away from export crops to
staple foods for local consumption, sustainable farming
could feed the world. 

In 1998 a delegation representing every African country
except South Africa submitted a joint statement to a UN
conference on genetic research. The delegates had been
inspired by a Monsanto campaign that used images of starving
African children to plug its technology. The statement read:
`We strongly object that the image of the poor and hungry
from our countries is being used by giant multinational
corporations to push a technology that is neither safe,
environmentally-friendly nor economically beneficial to us.
We do not believe that such companies or gene technologies
will help our farmers to produce the food that is needed in
the 21st century. On the contrary, we think it will destroy
the diversity, the local knowledge and the sustainable
agricultural systems that our farmers have developed for
millennia, and that it will undermine our capacity to feed
ourselves.' 

Sources: Briefing papers by Genewatch, Friends of the Earth,
the Soil Association, GM Free Wales, Farm




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