Sierra Club is part of this!!
MANY thanks to Neil Carman, PhD, one of the
scientists who volunteers on Sierra Club's Genetic Engineering Action Team
(GEAT) - for all his relentless work on this!
laurel hopwood, GEAT Chair
For Immediate Release, July 1,
2010
Contacts:
Marc Fink, Center for Biological Diversity,
(218) 525-3884
George Kimbrell, Int'l Center for Technology
Assessment/Center for Food Safety, (571) 527-8618
Anne Petermann, Global Justice Ecology
Project, (802) 578-0477
Lawsuit Filed to Halt Release of Genetically
Engineered Eucalyptus Trees Across the American South
Fort Pierce, Fla.- An alliance of conservation
organizations today sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture over its approval of
open-air field tests of a genetically engineered (GE) hybrid of eucalyptus tree
across the southern United States. The permit, issued to a company called
ArborGen, which is a joint initiative of International Paper, MeadWestvaco and
Rubicon, was approved May 12 with minimal environmental review. It authorizes
the experimental planting and flowering of a new, genetically engineered hybrid
on 28 secret sites across seven southern states - Alabama, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Texas.
"In refusing to prepare a detailed
environmental review, the Department of Agriculture ignored serious risks before
permitting this action," said Marc Fink, an attorney with the Center for
Biological Diversity. "Federal agencies can't be allowed to neglect their duty
to the public trust. Once this genie is out of the bottle and escapes to
neighboring lands, it's irreversible."
ArborGen hopes its GE "cold-tolerant"
Eucalyptus will become widely planted for pulp and biomass. But eucalyptus trees
are not native to the United States and are known to become invasive, displacing
native wildlife and plants in various areas around the country and increasing
wildfire risk. "Releasing GE cold-tolerant Eucalyptus trees into the wild in
multiple states greatly increases the risk they will spread uncontrollably
throughout the region," said Dr. Neil Carman of the Sierra Club.
In approving the GE eucalyptus permits, the
Department of Agriculture ignored the concerns of numerous agencies and
scientists, including the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and the
Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council, which formally criticized the proposed open
field tests of these genetically engineered trees.
In addition to approving these test sites,
Agriculture is also considering a "deregulation" petition submitted by ArborGen
that would allow widespread commercial planting of GE Eucalyptus without any
limits or regulation. According to the U.S. Forest Service, GE Eucalyptus
plantations in the southern United States would use more than twice the water of
pine plantations in a region already suffering from a depleted water
supply.
"These tests include planting over a quarter
of a million genetically engineered eucalyptus trees along the Gulf Coast and
into South Carolina," said Anne Petermann of Global Justice Ecology Project and
the STOP GE Trees Campaign. "Ultimately they plan to produce up to half a
billion GE eucalyptus seedlings annually for planting across the U.S. South.
This would be another disaster for these beleaguered Gulf Coast states, leading
to a loss of native forests and biodiversity, depleting ground water and
worsening climate change."
"Over the last generation the people of the
South have watched the forests of our region destroyed by industrial forestry,
impacting our water quality, wildlife habitat and quality of life," said Scot
Quaranda of Dogwood Alliance. "The federal government's decision to approve the
use of GE Eucalyptus trees in our region will open the door to further
exploitation of the people and forests of the South. This decision must be
overturned."
The organizations are represented by attorneys
Marc Fink of the Center for Biological Diversity, George Kimbrell of the
International Center for Technology Assessment and the Center for Food Safety,
and Jeanne Marie Zokovitch Paben, director of the Earth Advocacy Clinic at Barry
University School of Law.
To read comments submitted by Georgia
Department of Natural Resources, click here.
To read comments submitted by the Florida
Exotic Pest Plant Council, click here.
For more info:
http://truefoodnow.org/2010/07/01/lawsuit-filed-to-halt-release-of-genetically-engineered-eucalyptus-trees-across-the-american-south/
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