09.02.2007
The Hungarian government is confident it will be allowed to retain a ban on a genetically modified maize crop approved for feed use in the European Union, when the issue - which could have signifcant affects for the wider food industry - is debated later this month. Speaking at a news conference ahead of the talks, Hungary’s state secretary Kalman Kovacs announced that there was sufficient anti-GM feeling within the EU to ensure support for the country’s stand.
09.02.2007
Amid agrarian unrest over special economic zones and crop losses, some NGOs are mobilising support to fight genetically modified crops. In Chitrakoot district in the backward and parched Bundelkhand area in Uttar Pradesh, where villages routinely empty due to migration, an NGO has persuaded 64 villages to pledge against growing GM crops. Villagers of Chitrakoot and Banda districts gathered in Ganivan in Chitrakoot on February 8 and took the pledge administered by Forum for Biotechnology & Food Security.
09.02.2007
Negros officials and representatives from the private sector believe that in a few years, a shared goal of making the island «the organic food bowl of Asia” can be achieved. But, amidst efforts to go totally organic, there is at least one serious hitch that needs to be addressed immediately – the use of genetically-engineered (GE) farm produce such as the Bt corn. If stringent measures are adopted right away against the Bt corn, officials may have to think twice about the consequences and the impact it will have on the farmers using the GE variety, said Oriental Negros Board Member Pryde Henry Teves.
09.02.2007
There’s growing interest in raising canola seeds for the biodiesel industry, but not in Skagit County. Seed growers would like the state Department of Agriculture to create a canola-free zone. It would cover all of Skagit County, along with parts of Island, Whatcom, Snohomish and Clallam counties. The growers worry that canola could cross-pollinate with certain vegetable seeds, particularly cabbage, and hurt the area’s $20 million seed industry.
09.02.2007
Brazil plans to invest 10 billion reais ($4.77 billion) in biotechnology over the next decade to fuel growth in agriculture, pharmaceuticals and other industries. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed a decree today creating the program to invest 1 billion reais annually for 10 years. Lula also called on companies to match the government"s investments.
08.02.2007
Lee Sanders, senior vice president for the American Bakers Association, said she found out only a month ago that the U.S. sugar beet industry was set to begin planting Roundup Ready sugar beets. The lack of attention paid to the industry"s action is in stark contrast to what has occurred with wheat, despite the fact both commodities are used as ingredients in making bread. Sanders was speaking at the Joint Biotech Committee of U.S. Wheat Associates and the National Association of Wheat Growers, where she went over a survey indicating higher-income males from the South were least resistant to genetically modified wheat while lower-income females from the West were most concerned. As for sugar, there was no usage information.
08.02.2007
Greenpeace activists Arnaud Apoteker and Andi Freimueller, speaking at a conference Wednesday at Kuwait Journalists Association (KJA), said food contaminated with genetically engineered (GE) organisms is found in Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. They opined that awareness on GE food is low in the region «and is a new topic here.” Explaining about Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO), Apoteker, who is the coordinator of the GMO campaign in Europe, said «they are living organisms created in the laboratories through the transfer of genes from one species to another. There are new varieties of plants created through controlled mutations with animal or human genes.” A particular variety of maize used by pharmaceutical companies has human genes in it, he added. «This variety, fortunately, has not been commercialized.”
08.02.2007
Not surprisingly, the Food and Drug Administration"s determination that meat and dairy products from cloned animals are safe to eat has sparked no small controversy. Critics were quick to level a number of charges against the practice, including claims that animals involved in the process are harmed. In its 678-page draft risk assessment, the FDA sought to allay concerns about the welfare of cloned animals, stating: "(Somatic cell nuclear transfer) can pose an increased frequency of health risks to animals involved in the cloning process, but these do not differ qualitatively from those observed in other (assisted reproductive technologies) or natural breeding."
08.02.2007
Swiss agrochemicals company Syngenta increased its net profit by 12 per cent last year to a record $872 million (SFr1.08 billion). The Basel-based company said the result was due to good sales of crop protection products where it is the world leader.
08.02.2007
Australian and New Zealand regulators are failing to resist an audacious bid by GM plant developers to have them abandon a fundamental principle of food safety testing. The internationally accepted baseline for assessing the safety of a GM food is to conduct studies that consistently compare it with the closest non-GM relative. Such a ‘comparator’ is considered the standard because of its long history of safe use as a food for people.
08.02.2007
The Canada-based International Development Research Centre (IDRC) in collaboration with the Gene Campaign has launched a research study on the attitudes and perceptions towards genetically modified (GM) crops and foods in India. The study, launched on Wednesday, is slated to be completed within 30 months. IDRC has undertaken a similar study in China relating to the agri-biotechnology policy.
08.02.2007
A pair of biotech agribusinesses wants to go head to head with Monsanto Co. in creating a better cotton seed, but they may never get there. At issue is Monsanto"s proposed $1.5 billion purchase of Delta & Pine Land Co. Swiss firm Syngenta AG and Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc., a DuPont company, had planned to partner with Delta, combining their genetic traits with D&PL"s seed. The Monsanto deal is pending an antitrust review by the Justice Department. If it goes through, Syngenta and Pioneer will have to turn to rival Monsanto as their cotton seed partner.
07.02.2007
"Indian farmers are clamouring for genetically-modified seeds"; so said India"s agriculture minister Agit Singh five years ago. If that indeed was the case then - which is open to dispute - much has changed since. [...] The only GM crop now being grown commercially might put a shirt on your back but is absolutely guaranteed not to alleviate hunger - it is cotton.
07.02.2007
In a decision broadly affecting field trials of genetically engineered crops a federal district judge ruled yesterday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) must halt approval of all new field trials until more rigorous environmental reviews are conducted. Citing potential threats to the environment, Judge Harold Kennedy found in favor of the Center for Food Safety that USDA"s past approvals of field trials of herbicide tolerant, genetically engineered bentgrass were illegal.
07.02.2007
With royal fanfare, British Petroleum just donated $500 million in research funds for UC Berkeley, Lawrence Livermore Laboratories and the University of Illinois to develop new sources of energy—primarily biotechnology to produce biofuel crops. This comes on the anniversary of Berkeley’s hapless research deal with seed giant Novartis ten years ago. However, at half a billion dollars, the BP grant dwarfs Novartis’ investment by a factor of 10. The graphics of the announcement were unmistakable: BP’s corporate logo is perfectly aligned with the flags of the Nation, the State, and the University. [...] The potential consequences for the environment and society of BP’s funding are deeply disturbing. In the wake of the report of the external review of the UCB-Novartis agreement that recommended that the university not enter into such agreements in the future, how could such a major deal be announced without wide consultation of the UC faculty? The university has been recruited into a corporate partnership that may irreversibly transform the plant’s food and fuel systems and concentrating tremendous power in the hands of a few corporate partners.
07.02.2007
South Dakota legislators rejected a bill Tuesday that would have made it illegal to raise or sell Roundup Ready Alfalfa in the state. Those who want to prohibit the genetically altered, herbicide-resistant crop from being grown throughout South Dakota said it threatens to cross pollinate and ruin the purity of common strains of alfalfa.
07.02.2007
In a decision broadly affecting field trials of genetically engineered crops a federal district judge ruled yesterday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) must halt approval of all new field trials until more rigorous environmental reviews are conducted. Citing potential threats to the environment, Judge Harold Kennedy found in favor of the Center for Food Safety that USDA"s past approvals of field trials of herbicide tolerant, genetically engineered bentgrass were illegal.
07.02.2007
The agriculture sector is the biggest beneficiary of biotechnology advancement efforts in Malaysia, according to Plantation Industries and Commodities parlimentary secretary Datuk Dr Vijayaratnam S.Seevaratnam. [...] By 2020, the biotechnology sector will create 28,000 new jobs and contribute to about 5% of Malaysia"s gross domestic product.
07.02.2007
The global rejection of genetically engineered rice is revealed today as 41 of the world"s biggest exporters, processors and retailers issued written commitments to stay GE free. The worldwide tide of opposition is reflected in the new Greenpeace report, "Rice Industry in Crisis." The report carries extracts of company statements covering Asia, Europe, Australia, and North and South America and includes a commitment from the world"s largest rice processor, Ebro Puleva, to stop buying US rice. This follows a major contamination incident in 2006, when the world"s rice supply was contaminated with an experimental and illegal variety of GE rice produced by biotech company Bayer.
07.02.2007
"Indian farmers are clamouring for genetically-modified seeds"; so said India"s agriculture minister Agit Singh five years ago. If that indeed was the case then - which is open to dispute - much has changed since. [...] The only GM crop now being grown commercially might put a shirt on your back but is absolutely guaranteed not to alleviate hunger - it is cotton.