----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, December 10, 2004 1:42
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Subject: Campaigners dismiss 'safe GM'
report
"Consumers
don't want GM crops and the environment certainly doesn't need them. It's time
this ailing industry was put to bed."
Subj: GMW: Campaigners
dismiss 'safe GM' report
Date: 11/30/2004 2:48:53 AM Central Standard
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link to report at end
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Campaigners dismiss 'safe GM' report
Jeremy Lennard and agencies
The Guardian, November 29, 2004
http://www.guardian.co.uk/gmdebate/Story/0,2763,1362276,00.html
Environmental organisations reacted
angrily today to claims that a newly published study on genetically modified
crops in Britain presented no evidence that they harm the environment.
One of the report's principal claims - that GM crops do not deplete
the soil of weed seeds needed by many birds and other wildlife - was flawed by
the compilers' own admission that their test's "severely reduced" sensitivity
meant that some differences between GM and non-GM trails may have been missed,
according to Friends of the Earth.
The Botanical and Rotational
Implications of Genetically Modified Herbicide Tolerance (Bright) project was
carried out by a group of research and industrial partners coordinated by
Jeremy Sweet of the National Institute of Agricultural Botany. Over a
four-year period, it grew sugar beet and oilseed rape genetically modified to
be resistant to herbicides in rotation with cereal crops and compared the
results with conventional sugar beet and oil seed rape grown in the same
rotation.
Bright's aim was to mimic normal agricultural practice and
measure how GM crops performed in a crop rotation.
"Our research
indicates that there was no long-term difference in weed populations in field
areas using these GM and non-GM crops. In addition, growing GM
herbicide-tolerant crops could provide farmers with the flexibility to improve
plant diversity by only controlling weeds when they are competing with the
crop," said Dr Sweet.
Friends of the Earth's GM campaigner, Emily
Diamand, said the results appeared to confirm fears that if released
commercially GM crops would be difficult to control and would cross-pollinate
with non-GM crops, which would pose a "real threat" of contamination for
conventional varieties.
"Conventional oilseed rape would be threatened
with GM contamination, and GM 'superweeds' could add to problems for farmers.
It is little wonder that GM food and crops are so unpopular," Ms Diamand said.
Greenpeace also criticised the findings of the Bright project, which
was sponsored by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Defra), the Scottish executive's environment and rural affairs department,
Britain's national cereal growing association and five biotech companies.
"Much more extensive trials have shown these GM crops are bad for UK
wildlife and no amount of small-scale tests are going to change the fact that,
in the real world, GM crop contamination is inevitable," Doug Parr, the
organisation's chief scientist, said.
"It's virtually
impossible for farmers in Canada to grow organic oilseed rape because of
contamination, while in the USA GM crops have seen farmers spraying more
herbicides on GM herbicide-tolerant crops even though the first claims were
that there would be less.
"Consumers don't want GM crops and the
environment certainly doesn't need them. It's time this ailing industry was
put to bed."
Friends of the Earth said the new research should offer
little comfort to the biotech industry, adding that any suggestion it could be
used to push the case for GM commercialisation would be "clutching at GM
straws".
The chairman of the Bright project management committee,
Windsor Griffiths, said the report would benefit government policy makers not
just in Britain but across Europe.
"This four-year research project
has shown clearly the benefits and limitations of GM herbicide-tolerant crops
when grown in rotation with non-GM crops. The knowledge we have accumulated
will be very useful for providing guidance for growers of these crops, should
they be commercialised," he said.
The report's findings were welcomed
by a Defra spokesman who said the results would be "considered carefully".
"The report will be forwarded to the Advisory Committee on Releases to
the Environment [Acre] for consideration and we expect Acre will publish its
advice on the report next spring," he said.
"While this report is
important and will be considered carefully, the earliest possible date for the
cultivation of GM herbicide-tolerant crops in the UK is 2008," he added.
In September, a survey showed public attitudes to GM foods were
hardening. Some 61% of people polled on behalf of the consumer magazine Which?
said they were concerned about the use of GM material in food production - up
from 56% in 2002.
Report's findings:
http://www.hgca.com/publications/documents/cropresearch/BRIGHT_1-4_.pdf
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