----- forwarded message -----
Date: Tue, 21 May 2002 17:12:07 -0700
From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Designer crops already abundant on grocery shelves

Eating altered genes

<http://mai.flora.org/forum/37514>

Designer crops already abundant on grocery shelves

BY: MIKE TONER
The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
May 19, 2002

It is an ordinary supermarket with ordinary food --- a shopper's bounty of
cereals, canned foods and condiments. But Andrew Stocklinski --- Ph.D. in
pharmaceutical chemistry, former professor at the University of Georgia,
former researcher for a major drug company and a self-made organic farmer
--- is no ordinary shopper.
He's patrolling the front lines of a looming battle over what America eats.
Stocklinski, a Watkinsville resident, shakes his head sadly as he pulls
items off the shelf of the chain supermarket where he often shops so he can
study the fine print of package labels. There are strawberry preserves with
corn starch, potato chips with cottonseed oil and baby formula with soy
protein. Over in the freezer case, there's a seafood sandwich spread with
soybean oil and hamburger patties with textured soy.  His eyes rove the
labels on double fudge brownies, dill pickles, peanut butter, a bag of
bagels and berry punch. They all contain ingredients derived from corn,
soybeans, cotton or canola. And Stocklinski said that means any of them
could contain traces of genetically modified material.
"Genetic engineering" may conjure images of exotic cures for cancer,
man-made strains of anthrax and human cloning. But the most widespread use
of genetic engineering is as familiar as the farm --- and as close as the
supermarket.
Since the first commercial modified crops were introduced six years ago,
plantings have soared. This year, GM crops, as they are known in the food
industry, will be growing on more than one out of every four acres of
U.S.  cropland. Come fall, farmers will harvest 90 million acres of
transgenic cotton, corn, soybeans and other crops. How much of it gets to
the supermarket, and in what form, is a more elusive statistic.
"All you can say is that a lot of these processed foods are suspect," said
Stocklinski, gesturing with a box of corn dogs. "There is no way any
shopper can tell for certain whether genetically modified material is
present in any of these products. There's nothing on the label to tell you,
so all we can do is make an educated guess."
Consumer groups estimate that 50 percent to 70 percent of all processed
foods sold in America contain traces of genetically modified material. The
calculation is admittedly a crude one. This year, 74 percent of the
U.S.  soybean crop will be genetically modified. So will 71 percent of
cotton, 32 percent of corn and 61 percent of canola. Those crops are
ingredients in the starches, sweeteners, syrups and oils found in thousands
of processed foods. But genetic engineering plays a role in other foods, too.
About half the papayas from Hawaii are engineered to resist a papaya virus.
Most hard cheeses are manufactured with a genetically modified yeast that
takes the place of enzymes from calves' stomachs. Most milk sold in the
United States is produced with the help of a genetically modified growth
hormone, which is injected into lactating cows to boost milk production.
Health risks unknown
When it comes to the health effects of genetically modified foods, the jury
is still out. Evidence is sketchy. Suspicions, especially among food safety
groups, are abundant.
Experts say modified foods are too new for long-term health effects to have
appeared in people who eat them. The American Medical Association
acknowledges that foreign genes introduced into foods are a potential
source of exotic allergens, antibiotic resistance or other, unknown effects
on human health. But so far, the AMA said, there has been "no overt adverse
effects on human health."
As the use of genetically modified crops has soared, however, many
countries --- including China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and members of the
European Union --- have insisted that, in the absence of definitive
knowledge, consumers should at least be able to decide what they
eat.  Dozens of countries now require that any foods with significant
levels of modified material must say so on the package.
The United States does not --- even though U.S. grown crops constitute 80
percent of the world's transgenic crops. As American farmers have rushed to
embrace such crops, the battle over what America will eat is shifting from
the fields to supermarkets and corporate boardrooms. Several recent opinion
polls show most Americans know little --- and on many issues appear to be
evenly divided over the benefits and risks of genetically engineered food.
But the polls clearly show 75 percent or more of U.S.  consumers want more
information about those foods --- and want it on the food they buy.
They aren't likely to get it any time soon. The Food and Drug
Administration has decided not to require labeling of currently available
modified foods on the grounds they are "substantially equivalent" to
conventional foods.
Food manufacturers adamantly oppose mandatory labeling. "Such requirements
could impose substantial costs on consumers without any added benefit,"
said Gene Grabowski, vice president of Grocery Manufacturers Association,
which represents most of the major food and beverage companies in the country.
Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson, whose department
includes the FDA, is more blunt. He said labels "would only frighten
consumers and play into the hands of those who exploit fear."
The FDA's response has been to roll out a voluntary labeling policy that
allows manufacturers to address the modified content of their food on the
package if they want to.
Most major grocery chains have organic food sections where items certified
as organic are supposed to be free of genetically modified
ingredients.  Health food stores and a few grocery chains --- such as
Texas-based Whole Foods Market --- have taken pains to assure they sell
food that is free of transgenic ingredients.
Most foods in most stores, however, make no mention of the matter. "The
current system does not provide consumers with the information they
desire," said Gregory Jaffe of the Center for Science in the Public
Interest. "Manufacturers fear, with good reason, that they will lose
customers if a label declares the presence of a genetically engineered
ingredient." The result, he said, will be "a few products labeling that
they do not contain such ingredients and virtually no products stating that
they do."
In fact, some organic food companies touting products as "GM free" or "not
genetically modified" have received stern warnings from the FDA that the
claims are misleading. "Free," the FDA said, is virtually impossible to
verify. And the agency said "genetically modified" is a term that applies
to conventional plant breeding, too.
Many organic food suppliers take great care to assure their products do not
contain modified ingredients and say so on their packaging. The FDA,
however, wants them to use what it says are more accurate descriptions such
as "We do not use ingredients produced using biotechnology" and "not
genetically engineered."
Stores take vows
There's more to the controversy than splitting hairs over
semantics.  Supermarkets are increasingly the targets of environmental
groups that oppose genetically modified foods. Pressured by Greenpeace and
its customers, Trader Joe's, a California-based chain with 200 grocery
stores in 15 states, last year agreed to gradually remove all modified
foods from its shelves. The company told its suppliers it would buy their
products only if they are free of such ingredients.
Buoyed by that victory, Greenpeace this year is waging a similar campaign
against Safeway, the nation's third-largest supermarket chain. "Safeway has
a close relationship with its suppliers," said Greenpeace spokeswoman
Kimberly Wilson. "If they tell them they won't accept GM foods, the
suppliers, and the food companies themselves, will respond. They can do it
if they want to."
So far, Safeway isn't buying the idea. Spokesman Brian Dowling said the
grocer relies on the federal government to set food safety standards. "We,
the food industry collectively, find no reason to alter product selection,"
he said.
But in an industry where a medium-size food manufacturer may have more than
1,000 suppliers and over 8,000 ingredients flowing though processing plants
making everything from potato chips to baby formula, that is no easy task.
To a limited extent, however, the food industry already uses "identity
preservation" of ingredients, for kosher and organic foods. And although
segregating millions of tons of corn, soybeans and other crops would be a
huge task, international trade already is forcing the industry to track
modified crops and products --- or suffer the consequences.
China, which imports $1 billion worth of U.S. soybeans a year, halted
imports of soybeans for three months this year because the beans didn't
meet its new standards for labeling. With differences now ironed out, trade
has resumed, but the impasse underscores the need to identify modified
products properly. Brazil has been making inroads into U.S. soy exports to
Europe because it doesn't allow modified crops.
Failures to segregate such foods can be costly. When Japanese inspectors
found unapproved modified ingredients in a package of potato snacks, dozens
of companies had to recall their products. And when unauthorized modified
ingredients from the Starlink corn, engineered to produce a pesticidal
protein, were found in tortillas and other corn products in the United
States, more than 300 products were recalled nationwide. The Monsanto Co.,
which controls the technology used in producing most modified commercial
crops, said this spring that traces of unapproved modified canola --- a
variety that never had been intended for commercialization --- had somehow
slipped into the market. The Center for Food Safety, a Washington public
policy group, responded by asking the U.S. Department of Agriculture to
take criminal action against the company for "genetic pollution of our food
supply."
Food experts split
Some segments of the food industry are trying to stop any controversy
before it occurs. McDonald's has warned potato growers that it won't buy
modified spuds for its french fries. Starbucks has vowed not to buy
modified coffees or teas if they ever are developed commercially. Hershey
Foods has told sugar beet growers to forget about trying to sell the candy
company any sugar made from modified beets.
"It isn't because we have a safety problem," said Hershey Foods spokesman
John Long. "We wanted to delay this until the issue related to public
perception of GM crops has been fully resolved." The debate, however, seems
certain to intensify. Monsanto has developed genetically modified wheat
that it had planned to start selling next year. The company said the new
wheat, engineered to resist the herbicide Roundup, would increase farmers'
yield.
Wheat, however, is one of the world's oldest crops and --- in many parts of
the world, people tend to hold "the staff of life" in higher regard than
cornmeal and soy protein. As word of the new wheat spread, buyers from
Egypt to Japan have warned U.S. exporters their customers don't want it and
won't buy it. Two-thirds of Canada's export markets have said they don't
want it. Ripples of that reaction have spread rapidly up the food chain.
Half of all U.S. wheat is exported, and the prospect of roiling a $3.5
billion market has been sending shivers of concern through America's amber
waves of grain. U.S. Wheat Associates, which promotes wheat exports abroad,
said that without worldwide acceptance of the technology, genetically
modified wheat would hurt U.S. wheat exports more than it helps them. The
North Dakota Wheat Commission has said it isn't ready for modified wheat.
In the face of such sentiment, for acceptance, Monsanto has delayed
introduction of the new wheat until at least 2005. The company said more
time is needed to test the new wheat strains and to build up seed stocks.
Judging by the gathering storm, it may also need time to sell the new wheat
--- at home and abroad.
Disagreements over the impact of modified crops on human health, the
environment and international trade already divide public policymakers ---
as well as the experts who advise them.
Earlier this year, more than 3,000 scientists, including Nobel peace
laureate Norman Borlaug, the father of the "green revolution," which
brought self-sufficiency in food to such countries as India, endorsed
genetic engineering as a "powerful and safe means" to help feed the world's
growing population. In all, 19 Nobel Prize winners signed the declaration.
But it is an issue on which not even Nobel winners can agree.  George Wald,
Harvard biologist and Nobel laureate in medicine, calls genetic
manipulation the largest ethical problem science has faced. "Our morality
up to now has been to go ahead without restriction to learn all we can
about nature," he said. "Restructuring nature was not part of that bargain."
Despite tacit acceptance of "invisible" modified ingredients such as soy
protein, corn starch and canola oil in processed foods, consumers have yet
to play much of a role in the controversy. But that could change as gene
engineers turn their attention to more dramatic fare --- genetically
modified salmon, bananas with built-in vaccines, corn that produces
industrial chemicals, nicotine-free tobacco and cows that give silk instead
of milk.
WHAT AMERICANS THINK ABOUT GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOODS
54% have heard nothing or very little.
58% oppose modified ingredients in the food supply.
75% want to know whether their food has such ingredients.

Source: Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology.

"A lot of these processed foods are suspect," said organic farmer Andrew
Stocklinski of Watkinsville, a former University of Georgia professor who
opposes genetic changes. / MIKE TONER / Staff Photo:
Tall cotton: Altered crops that kill bugs and resist weedkillers are in the
ground all over America, including hundreds of thousands of acres in
Georgia. These seeds of change don't sit well with everybody, though.

ATTITUDES ABOUT GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOODS

Americans have limited knowledge of modified foods, but a strong majority
would at least have those foods labeled, even though the Food and Drug
Administration doesn't require it.
44 percent have heard some or a great deal about such foods.
54 percent have heard nothing or very little.
2 percent don't know.
62 percent say they have not eaten modified foods.
19 percent say they have.
19 percent don't know.
58 percent oppose the introduction of modified foods into the food supply.
26 percent favor their introduction.
16 percent are undecided.
65 percent favor continued research on such foods.
26 percent oppose it.
9 percent don't know.
75 percent want to know whether their food has been genetically altered.
21 percent say it's not important.
4 percent don't know.

Source: March 2001 poll of 1,001 Americans, conducted by the Mellman Group
and Public Opinion Strategies for the Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology.


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