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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Biodemocracy News #30
Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2000 10:45:07 -0600
From: "biodemocracy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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BioDemocracy News #30 (Nov. 2000) StarLink: More Bad News for Biotech
News & Analysis on Genetic Engineering, Factory Farming, & Organics by: Ronnie
Cummins

BioDemocracy News is a publication of the Organic Consumers Association
www.purefood.org
_________________________________________________________________
StarLink: More Bad News for Biotech

 Quotes of the Month:

"Agricultural biotechnology will find a supporter occupying the White House next
year, regardless of which candidate wins the election in November..." Monsanto's
electronic newsletter www.monsanto.com 10/06/00

"The [StarLink corn] protein, known as Cry9C and not found in other crops that
are genetically modified, is safe for animals but may trigger allergic reactions
in humans, including fever, rashes or diarrhea, according to government
scientists." Washington Post,  "Corn Woes Prompt Kellogg to Shut Down Plant" 10/21/00

"I think they ought to leave nature alone. There is a reason food grows like it
does.'' A consumer, Krista Beddo, shopping in a supermarket near Monsanto's
headquarters in St. Louis, Associated Press, "Concern Surfaces Over Taco Recall" 
10/25/00

"U.S. grain exporters expressed relief on Friday after the government lifted
export restrictions on shipments tainted with traces of an unapproved biotech
corn, allowing shipments of previously banned corn to Latin America, Asia and
Europe. While the Clinton administration action removes some legal liability for
exporters, companies said they are still worried about losing overseas sales to
other nations... Archer Daniels Midland executives said its [StarLink-tainted]
corn shipments would be traveling to South America, Europe, [and] Mexico, but
not to Japan. 'I think we are going to have to wait a little bit on Japan,' an
ADM spokesperson stated.' " Reuters 10/27/00
__________________________________________________________________

The Gene Giants suffered a serious setback on September 18, when the Genetically
Engineered Food Alert (GEFA) coalition www.gefoodalert.org revealed that an
illegal, likely allergenic variety (Cry9C) of genetically engineered (GE) corn
called StarLink had been detected in a major US consumer food product, Kraft
taco shells.  The GE Food Alert Coalition, which tested the taco shells and
broke the news about StarLink, is made up of seven US groups, Friends of the
Earth, Organic Consumers Association, Pesticide Action Network, Center for Food
Safety, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, National Environmental
Trust, and the US Public Interest Research Group.

The StarLink scandal made headlines, generated thousands of news articles and TV
clips, and brought home the realization to American consumers, that the nation's
supermarkets are filled with an extensive inventory of untested, unlabeled,
genetically engineered foods. In 1998 the US Environmental Protection Agency had
approved the commercial cultivation of StarLink - corn spliced with a powerful
Bt toxin (bacillus thuringiensis). Developed by a subsidiary of the
French-German biotech conglomerate Aventis, StarLink was approved only for
animal feed because of fears that this controversial Cry9C variety (50 to100
times more potent than other Bt-spliced varieties) could set off food allergies
in humans.

Critics of GE food have warned for years that splicing foreign proteins into
common food products, proteins which in most cases humans have never eaten
before, can set off dangerous food allergies-with symptoms ranging from fever,
rashes, and diarrhea to anaphylactic shock and sudden death. The FDA admits that
eight percent of all US children are now plagued by food allergies, and that the
situation is growing worse. Nutritionists warn of a suspected link between food
allergies and asthma. Even the staid New England Journal of Medicine warned in
its March 14, 1996 issue that unlabeled genetically engineered foods are
"uncertain, unpredictable, and untestable."

In 1996, a gene-altered soybean spliced with Brazil nut DNA patented by what is
now Dupont's seed subsidiary, Pioneer Hi-Bred, was pulled off the market before
commercialization after researchers learned that it could set off a deadly
allergy in humans. Even after this near-disaster, Plant Genetic Systems, the
developer of StarLink corn (PGS was later bought out by Aventis), apparently
continued gene-splicing Brazil Nut DNA into rapeseed, potatoes, tobacco, beans,
and peas in European field tests in the open environment. (See Plant Molecular
Biology (1998) 37:829-838.)

Denials - Then Mass Recalls

The biotech industry, Kraft/Phillip Morris, and the EPA at first tried to deny
the validity of the GEFA lab tests, but within days public pressure forced
Kraft, the largest food corporation in America, to recall 2.5 million boxes of
the corn tacos.  This action was followed by a halt of sales of Cry9C seeds by
Aventis on Sept. 26, and a formal recall order issued by the USDA on Oct. 9 for
all 350,000 acres of StarLink corn planted across the US. GEFA then struck again
and forced further recalls (Safeway corn taco shells, Mission Foods corn
products, Western Family brand corn tacos) by announcing on Oct. 11 and Oct. 25
that StarLink corn had been detected in other brand-name products being sold in
thousands of supermarkets. In the wake of the StarLink crisis, some of the
largest US food and animal feed processors, Kellogg, ConAgra, Archer Daniels
Midland, and Tyson, either temporarily closed their grain mills or announced
mandatory testing for Cry9C corn. Meanwhile, the White House sent emergency
teams to Japan and Europe, trying to reassure major US trading partners that the
StarLink controversy would be kept under control.

By the end of October, consumer confidence in the safety of GE foods was
severely shaken. Thousands of farmers and grain elevator operators expressed
anger at Aventis and the biotech industry. The state Attorney General's office
in Iowa criticized Aventis and seed dealers for not telling farmers to keep
StarLink out of the human food chain. As one Iowa grain elevator operator told
the Washington Post on Oct. 25, "I think we're just hitting the tip of the
iceberg here. We just don't know what's in those elevators, and when we start
letting this stuff go and it's tested, it's going to get worse."

StarLink Hits the Fan

Aventis, Kraft, Safeway, Mission Foods, Western Family, Shaw's, Food Lion,
Randalls, Kroger, Albertson's, H.E.B., and scores of other food companies and
supermarket chains (not to mention grain elevators and farmers) have begun
totaling up several hundred million dollars in losses. Consumers claiming to
have been poisoned by StarLink corn products filed a multi-million dollar
class-action suit in Chicago. Kraft and a number of supermarket chains have
voiced dissatisfaction with the lack of oversight of GE crops by US regulatory 
agencies.

The EPA is caught between a rock and a hard place: fending off pressure by the
biotech industry to reverse itself and declare that Cry9C corn is safe for
humans, and on the other hand, resisting pressure from public interest groups to
take all of the nation's Bt crops-corn, cotton, potatoes, and soybeans-off the
market because of their evermore obvious hazards. Meanwhile, America's overseas
allies are trying to figure out what to do about the growing demand on the part
of consumers in their own countries to close the door on billions of dollars of
GE-tainted US agricultural imports.

The US announcement on Oct. 27 that they would let Archer Daniels Midland,
Cargill, ConAgra and other grain exporters ship StarLink-contaminated corn to
international markets only made matters worse. In effect the grain cartel and
the White House were telling America's best overseas customers: Here, take this
contaminated corn. Americans are refusing to eat this stuff, Tyson Foods, the
largest poultry producer in the US, won't even feed it to their chickens, but
you can eat it.

The fallout and collateral damage from the StarLink scandal will likely
continue. As the New York Times stated Oct. 17, Aventis may be hit with a
barrage of lawsuits: "Just what farmers knew and when they knew it could end up
playing a role in lawsuits growing out of the affair, according to lawyers who
handle agriculture cases. Aventis and the seed companies might have a hard time
fending off liability for the expenses of farmers, grain elevators, millers and
food companies in sorting out the mess if they did not do enough to head off
foreseeable risks that mixing would occur."

The appalling lack of US government regulation and the greed of so-called Life
Science corporations to rush untested, and in this case, likely dangerous
products to market have now become obvious, even in the heartland of agbiotech,
the United States. Polls taken before the StarLink scandal broke showed that the
majority (51% in a poll by Angus Reid) of Americans and Canadians (60% in a poll
by Unilever) were already opposed to genetically engineered foods, while an
overwhelming majority (80-94%) support mandatory labeling, mainly so that they
can avoid buying these controversial foods. US farmers, and even a number of
large food corporations, have already begun cutting back on their use of GE
seeds or food ingredients, as reported previously in BioDemocracy News #29
www.purefood.org. While 33% of US corn acreage was GE last year, this year it
fell to 19.5%. Whether or not the StarLink debacle represents a mortal blow to
the first generation of GE foods and crops remains to be seen. Certainly a
review of recent global developments indicates that the crisis of credibility
surrounding genetically engineered foods is steadily increasing.

FDA - No Labeling, No Safety Testing

* The US government's "no labeling" and "no safety testing" policy has become a
serious liability and source of controversy. The Center for Food Safety and
other public interest groups filed a major lawsuit in 1998 in US Federal Court
to take GE foods and crops off the market.  On October 2, the lawsuit was headed
off by the FDA, but only by admitting in court that they actually have had no
real policy in place on genetically engineered foods and crops since 1992. In
effect, all so-called "regulation" up until now has been completely voluntary on
the part of Monsanto, Aventis, and the rest of the biotech industry. Commenting
on the Oct. 2 decision, Center for Food Safety attorney Andrew Kimbrell stated,
"This court decision means that for almost a decade these novel foods have gone
virtually unregulated in the United States. American consumers have been used as
unknowing guinea pigs..."

* Inside sources report that the FDA has postponed publishing new proposed
regulations on genetically engineered foods, at least until after the November
elections. In the aftermath of the StarLink controversy, the FDA understands
that its forthcoming proposed regulations (no mandatory labeling, no mandatory
safety testing, no required liability insurance) will likely set off a huge
public backlash during the legally required public comment period. But federal
officials and the Gene Giants are caught in a terrible bind. If they do what
most of the public wants and require mandatory pre-market safety testing and
labeling, leading food corporations and supermarkets will do what they are
already doing in Europe and Asia, that is remove GE foods and ingredients from
their brand-name products. Stores won't sell products branded with the "skull
and crossbones" of the GE label, and farmers will be very reluctant to grow
these crops. On the other hand if the FDA, USDA, and EPA continue to do the
bidding of the biotechnology industry, they risk losing billions of dollars in
US export sales, not to mention the political risks of provoking the ire of US
consumers, who are now apparently awakening to the GE food controversy with a 
vengeance.

International Fallout

* On the international front, the leading producers of genetically engineered
crops, the US (74% of all GE crops), Canada (10% of all GE crops), and Argentina
(15%), face a similar dilemma. If they try to use the hammer of economic
sanctions from the World Trade Organization to force Frankenfoods down the
throats of the WTO's other 131 nation-state members, they risk provoking a trade
war and possibly even a meltdown of the entire global "Free Trade" system. If
they don't use the police and enforcement power of the WTO, however, more and
more countries are going to make it harder and harder for untested and unlabeled
GE products to get into their countries. For example:

* Europe, which has not approved a new GE crop since April 1998, told the US on
Oct. 11 according to the Bureau of National Affairs journal, "that the only way
the European Union's de facto moratorium on new GM (genetically modified) seeds
is likely to be lifted is for US farmers to be required to segregate genetically
modified crops from those grown from traditional seeds..."

* Meanwhile new human health fears over antibiotic resistance genes in GE cattle
feeds are prompting Europe's leading food producers and supermarket chains to
ban GE animal feeds in their meat and dairy production. Recently a government
advisory board in Britain, the Advisory Committee on Animal Feeding Stuffs,
admitted that antibiotic resistant marker genes found in genetically engineered
foods and animal feeds may be able to transfer antibiotic resistance to the
bacteria in animals' guts, giving rise to dangerous pathogens in humans that
can't be killed by traditional antibiotics. German scientists earlier this
year-in a story widely reported across Europe-found that antibiotic resistant
genes from GE rapeseed plants were combining with bacteria in the stomachs and
intestines of bees.  BBC reported on Oct. 6 that the UK's major grocery chains,
Iceland, Sainsbury, Waitrose, Marks & Spencer's, and Asda are all removing GE
ingredients from animal feed. A recent UK poll commissioned by Friends of the
Earth found 63% of British shoppers wanting supermarkets to drop GM ingredients
from animal feeds. As reported in BioDemocracy News #29, the European Commission
and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations are now both
calling for mandatory labeling of animal feeds, a move that analysts predict
will all but kill non-segregated, GE-tainted US grain exports to Europe and Asia.

Cargill Segregating

* Cargill, the world's largest grain company, announced in September that they
are expanding their contract production and marketing of non-genetically
engineered corn, and will strictly segregate these varieties at their processing
plants in Paris, Illinois, Indianapolis, Indiana, and Liverpool, England. As
Cropchoice News www.cropchoice.com reported Sept. 29, "Cargill's latest parlay
into non-GMO comes at time when it and other big grain processors continue to
downplay the demand for non-biotech grain. But like ADM and ConAgra, Cargill is
making moves into the non-GMO market even as they suggest it is unimportant."
Cargill's shift reaffirms the conclusion of a recent study carried out by
professor David Bullock at the University of Illinois which found that US grain
handlers can efficiently and economically segregate GE and non-GE grain
varieties by simply designating specific grain elevators, grain processing
plants, and transportation facilities as either GE or non-GE.

* Government officials in Taiwan announced Oct. 17 that they will follow the
lead of other Asian and Pacific countries and require mandatory labeling of food
with genetically engineered ingredients.  According to officials, labeling
requirements will come into force in 2001-with similar measures being
implemented in South Korea and Japan. Taiwan is a major importer of US grains,
importing over 4.5 million metric tons of corn last year. According to
Cropchoice News, "The government's decision is in response to intense pressure
and follows publication of a Gallup poll in which 74% of Taiwanese said they
expected the government to require labels on GMO food." According to Reuters
news agency, Uni-Food Enterprises, Taiwan's largest food company, reacted to the
news by promising to comply with the labeling requirements and move toward using
non-genetically engineered ingredients. Uni-Food Enterprises, with $2.6 billion
in annual sales, produces animal feeds, dairy products, frozen foods, instant
noodles, and soft drinks.

Japan Says No Thanks

* According to an Associated Press story Oct. 25, Japanese authorities have
warned the United States not to export StarLink corn to Japan. Government
officials were embarrassed after a public interest group, the Consumers Union of
Japan, announced in Tokyo that it had found traces of StarLink corn in snack
foods sold in Japanese stores as well as in imported animal feed. StarLink corn
is prohibited in both human and animal feed in Japan. An earlier AP story on
Oct. 24 reported that an entire 55,000 ton shipload of US corn destined for
Japan was rejected after testing positive for StarLink, "sending shock waves
through importers in Japan as well as other Asian countries such as South Korea
and Taiwan." According to the AP "Japan imports about 60 percent of its food,
much of it from the United States. In 1999, Japan imported 15.9 million tons of
corn from the United States, including 10.8 million tons for animal feed, the
Foreign Ministry said. The remaining 5.1 million tons were for food, mostly for
corn starch." Korea imports about eight million tons of corn per year from the
US. The Consumers Union of Japan and allied consumer groups in South Korea are
calling for a moratorium on the importation of all GE foods into their
countries. In a recent poll 82% of Japanese consumers said they were opposed to
genetically engineered food-the highest level of resistance in the world.

*Worried officials from the U.S. Grains Council and the National Corn Growers
Association, two major agribusiness trade association groups, rushed to Tokyo in
late September to outline industry plans to channel StarLink into "approved
markets" and keep it out of shipments to Japan.  The White House also dispatched
a trade delegation to Europe. According to www.AgWeb.com, an "emergency meeting"
took place in Washington on Oct. 6 with agribusiness representatives meeting
with high officials from the Clinton and Gore administration. A National Corn
Growers Association official expressed the hope at this meeting that Japan would
soon approve StarLink for animal feed, but after the recent developments in
Japan, this scenario appears unlikely.

Latin Fallout

* The StarLink scandal has spread into Mexico and Latin America as well, with TV
coverage by networks such as Telemundo, Univision, and CNN. According to
Reuters, Mexico Greenpeace protesters on Oct. 11 "wearing white overalls and
mime-like white masks entered an upscale Mexico City supermarket and boldly
labeled mainstream corn flour products that contain genetically modified corn
with stickers bearing a giant "X," for "X-perimental." Corn flour is the main
ingredient in tortillas, Mexico's most important food product. Greenpeace also
announced in October that 450 tortilla factories across Mexico will use only
locally produced (non-GE) corn in their products. Mexico is the world center of
biodiversity for corn, with 25,000 varieties found in the country.
Environmentalists warn that pollen and "genetic pollution" from genetically
engineered corn plants could cause irreparable harm to Mexico's native corn
varieties. Mexico is also the winter home for Monarch butterflies, who migrate
south from Canada and the United States. An important study at Cornell
University in 1999 found that the pollen from Bt corn kills Monarch butterflies.

* According to a report posted by UK geneticist Mae-Wan Ho on the internet Oct.
18, Argentina, the second largest producer of genetically engineered crops in
the world after the United States, "is having second thoughts as the world
market [for GE soybeans and corn] collapses. This was the message conveyed by
both the Environment Minister Ruben Dario Patrouilleauz, who headed the
Argentinean delegation to the Biosafety Protocol Conference in Montreal, and the
Director General of Cultural Affairs, Raul Alfredo Estrado Oyuela. Both spoke at
a special Parliamentary debate on agricultural biotechnology in La Plata,
Federal Province of Buenos Aires, on Sept. 26." Monsanto has been very
successful thus far in getting 84% of Argentina's soybean farmers to plant GE
(Roundup Ready) soybeans. This may soon change however as EU markets for
Argentina's processed oils and animal feed begin to close down, and as EU and
Asian markets for Brazilian soybeans (where GE soya is illegal) continue to
rapidly expand.

Scientific Warning

* On the scientific front, the StarLink controversy has shined the spotlight
once again on the hazards of Bt-spliced crops in general, not just the Cry9C
variety. In dramatic testimony presented to the EPA Oct. 20, a highly regarded
international expert, Dr. Michael Hansen of the Consumers Union, pointed out
that: (1) The EPA has ignored an EPA-funded study that shows that Bt toxins have
induced signs of allergenicity in agricultural field workers, as well as an
additional study indicating allergenicity in lab rats; (2) the EPA has failed to
require tests of all Bt crops for allergenicity using the blood serum and
chemical reagents from these earlier studies-even though these tests could be
done quickly with little expense; (3) the EPA have failed to carry out adequate
safety tests for StarLink or any of the other Bt crops which they have approved;
(4) government "acute toxicity" protocols are based on the erroneous scientific
assumption that Bt toxins generated by gene-spliced plants in the field are
identical to Bt toxins produced by bacteria in the laboratory; and (5) the
government continues to downplay the potential hazards of antibiotic resistant
marker (ARM) genes-found in Bt crops and all genetically engineered foods-even
though recent studies underline that ARM genes have the ability to transfer
antibiotic resistance to soil bacteria, bees, mammals, and other organisms,
including humans. As Hansen reminded the EPA in May 1999, the British Medical
Association, which represents some 85% of the doctors in Britain, released a
report calling, in part, for a prohibition on the use of antibiotic resistance
marker genes in genetically engineered plants. For Dr. Hansen's full testimony
see: www.purefood.org/ge/btcomments.cfm

As Larry Bohlen of Friends of the Earth stated in a press release Oct. 20, "The
EPA should not allow Bt corn to be planted next year unless they can assure mill
workers, farmers and rural residents that they will not develop allergies and
respiratory problems. Farmers could be affected and not even know the reason why
due to the EPA's failure to test for health impacts."

* In a related scientific development, researchers at the University of
Minnesota have found that Bt corn does indeed pose a major hazard to Monarch
butterflies, since Monarchs are found in concentrated numbers in and around
milkweed plants in cornfields throughout the corn growing season. Researchers
were surprised to find, according to an Oct. 25 article in the Los Angeles
Times,  "just as many" Monarchs were breeding and feeding within cornfields as
in nonagricultural sites. In other words millions of Monarch butterflies
throughout the Midwest corn belt are feeding on their only food source, milkweed
plants, just at the same time that Bt corn plants are shedding their toxic
pollen, pollen which lab and field tests have conclusively shown are poisonous
to the butterflies. The biotech industry has worked overtime in the past year
trying to maintain that Bt pollen poses insignificant risks to Monarch
butterflies. Besides the Bt threat, scientists have warned that Monsanto's
Roundup herbicide, sprayed on GE soybeans and other crops, kills off the Monarch
caterpillar's sole food source, the milkweed plant.

Critics have pointed out that not only is Bt killing Monarchs, but that it is
also killing beneficial soil microorganisms and thereby damaging the entire soil
food web; as well as killing beneficial insects such as lacewings and ladybugs.
Scientists also warn that bees and birds are likely being harmed by eating
insects that have ingested the Bt toxin. In addition, organic farmers, 2/3 of
whom in the United States use a non-genetically engineered form of Bt spray as
an emergency pest management tool, have pointed out that crop pests (beetles,
boll worms, corn borers) will inevitably develop resistance to widely cultivated
Bt-spliced crops, creating superpests that will overwhelm organic farmers and
make organic agriculture more difficult, if not impossible. For all of these
reasons, Greenpeace, the Center for Food Safety, and a broad coalition of public
interest groups-including the Organic Consumers Association-are preparing
litigation to have all genetically engineered Bt crops taken off the market.

* Finally, on another scientific note, even the pro-biotech New Scientist
magazine Oct. 7 (UK) pointed out what has now become painfully obvious: if
biotech companies and the FDA are unable to keep an unapproved variety like
StarLink out of the human food chain and contained in restricted farm plots,
what are they going to do once the next generation of bio-pharm plants begin to
be commercialized, plants containing vaccines and pharmaceutical drugs, crops
that could harm and poison unsuspecting consumers? As the magazine concluded,
"We can't ignore the taco fiasco... Why was it left to Friends of the Earth to
commission the tests that found StarLink in taco shells? The food industry needs
to get its act together before the new generation of modified plants arrives.
Next time, the consequences could be serious."

For the moment the proponents of the Biotech Century seem to have survived the
latest storm. Unlike the FDA's last recall of a genetically engineered product,
the nutritional supplement l-Tryptophan, in 1989, which left in its wake 37
deaths and 5,000 injuries, there are no dead bodies of StarLink victims visible
on the TV news, but the Frankenfoods controversy continues to grow. The question
seems to be no longer, if there will be a biotech Chernobyl, but only when.
Stayed tuned to BioDemocracy News and the OCA website www.purefood.org for
further developments.

###End of BioDemocracy News # 30###

Ronnie Cummins
Organic Consumers Association
6101 Cliff Estate Road
Little Marais, MN 55614
Tel. 218-226-4164
Fax 218-226-4157
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<http://www.purefood.org>

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