Why Labels on Genetically Engineered Foods Won’t Cost Consumers a Dime
Monsanto’s Dirty War
by ZACH KALDVEER and RONNIE CUMMINS
The biotech industry, led by Monsanto, will soon descend on the 
state of Washington to try their best to defeat I-522, a citizens’ 
ballot initiative to require mandatory labeling of foods that contain 
genetically engineered (GE) ingredients. Voters should prepare 
themselves for an onslaught of discredited talking points, nonsensical 
red herrings, and outright lies designed to convince voters that they 
shouldn’t have the right to know what’s in the food they eat.
Topping the biotech industry’s propaganda playlist will no doubt be 
this old familiar tune: that requiring retailers to verify non-GMO 
ingredients in order to label them will be burdensome and costly, and 
the additional cost will be passed on to consumers who are already 
struggling to feed their families.
Playing to consumers’ fears of higher food costs makes good strategic sense, 
especially in tough economic times. But the argument doesn’t 
hold water, say food manufacturers and retailers who already have 
systems in place for verifying non-GMO, as well as rBGH-free, trans 
fat-free, country of origin and fair trade. The system involves using 
chain-of-custody, legally binding affidavits, not expensive testing.
“We have used the affidavit system repeatedly, without undue burden 
or cost,” said Trudy Bialic, Director of Public Affairs for 
Seattle-based PCC Natural Markets. PCC, the largest consumer-owned 
natural food retail co-operative in the United States, uses the 
affidavit system to ensure their chocolate isn’t made using child slave 
labor, their dairy products don’t come from animals subjected to rBGH 
hormones, and that all seafood was harvested using sustainable sources 
and practices.
Trader Joe’s, a privately held chain of nearly 400 U.S. stores, 
confirmed that the company’s private label products, under the names 
Trader Joe’s, Jose’s and Ming’s, are GMO-free, though the company 
doesn’t label them as such. In an email, a company spokesperson said:
“When developing products containing ingredients likely 
to come from genetically modified sources, we have the supplier of the 
product in question perform the necessary research to provide 
documentation that the suspect ingredients are from non-GMO sources.
>This documentation is in the form of affidavits, identity-preserved 
certification of seed stock, and third-party lab results from testing of the 
ingredients in question.”
Trader Joe’s performs random audits of items with suspect 
ingredients, using an outside, third-party lab to perform the testing, 
the company said. Trader Joe’s system is not unlike that of the USDA, 
which requires sworn statements from food producers to certify organic 
foods. The agency requires test samples from approximately 5 percent of 
products, all of which must be GMO-free in order to be certified organic. For 
the other 95 percent, the agency 
relies solely on sworn statements.
Clif Bar & Co. also requires affidavits from ingredient suppliers demonstrating 
they can meet the company’s stringent non-GMO 
requirements.
Monsanto would have you believe that verifying and labeling for 
non-GMO ingredients is a costly and burdensome affair, but the fact that Trader 
Joe’s, known for its discount prices, can provide GMO-free 
private label products, which reportedly account for over two-thirds of 
the company’s estimated annual $9 billion in sales, takes the wind out 
of the “burdensome” argument. That leaves the cost of adding another 
line of ink to a label. Trader Joe’s doesn’t yet label its private label 
products as GMO- free, but the company cites a lack of clear labeling 
guidelines from U.S. governmental agencies as the reason it doesn’t 
label, not cost.
Megan Westgate, Executive Director of the Non-GMO Project confirmed what 
retailers who use the affidavit system said:  “An 
affidavit system like what’s proposed in I-522 is a powerful way to have a 
significant impact on the food supply with minimal cost.”
How does the affidavit system work?
Companies selling non-GMO foods provide a sworn statement (i.e. an 
affidavit) to the retailer that the ingredients used are sourced from 
crops that aren’t intentionally genetically engineered. The affidavit, 
unless deliberately dishonest, protects the manufacturer and the 
retailer from liability in the case of unintentional GMO contamination.
Retailers are responsible only for labeling a few raw commodities 
that may contain GE ingredients, such as sweet corn, papaya, or squash.  In 
these cases, the retailer can either stick a simple label on the bin or ask 
their supplier for an affidavit stating that the crop is GMO 
free.
Under this system, no costly testing for GE ingredients is required. 
No burdensome government oversight is necessary. The system is 
inherently designed to protect small grocers and retailers, at no 
additional cost to the customer or taxpayer.
The beauty of the affidavit system is that it offers retailers and 
manufacturers a simple, easy way to comply with a regulatory model that 
provides consumers with the right to know what’s in their food without 
increasing grocery costs.  Even for manufacturers who might otherwise 
seek to pass on the trivial expense of relabeling to consumers, empirical 
studies show that the fear of losing customers in the competitive food industry 
will be a deterrent to raising prices. Did food costs change when we labeled 
calorie content?
Is the system reliable? Retailers say yes. Why would manufacturers 
intentionally deceive retailers only to open themselves up to a lawsuit 
and public relations nightmare? And the system has a proven track 
record. PCC Natural Markets, Trader Joe’s and Clif Bar all use 
affidavits, as do other manufacturers who use them for country-of-origin and 
no-trans fat labeling. And nearly two-thirds of the nation’s 
largest dairy processors use sworn affidavits from producers in order to label 
rBGH-free. (rBGH, or recombinant bovine growth hormone, is a 
synthetic, genetically engineered hormone injected into dairy cows to 
increase milk production).
Contrary to claims made by companies like Monsanto, states do have a 
constitutional right to label food. In fact, the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act 
explicitly allows states to add language to labels so long as the 
federal government doesn’t require language on the same subject – a 
right that has consistently held up in federal court.
A chain-of-custody, legally binding affidavit labeling system 
empowers consumers to make more informed choices about what we eat, 
without increasing the costs of groceries or burdening retailers and 
manufacturers.  One simple label to identify foods that have been 
genetically engineered, often using the genes of foreign bacteria and 
viruses, would lead more consumers to seek out sustainable, organic, 
non-GMO alternatives. And that – not some phony line about increased 
food costs – is why Monsanto is fighting labeling.
Zack Kaldveer is assistant media director at the Organic Consumers Association.
Ronnie Cummins is founder and director of the Organic Consumers Association. 
Cummins is author of numerous articles and books, including 
“Genetically Engineered Food: A Self-Defense Guide for Consumers” 
(Second Revised Edition Marlowe & Company 2004).

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/04/12/monsantos-dirty-war/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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