From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2006 00:47:11 EDT
Subject: Rice Industry: Keep GE Varieties in the Lab    By Jeffrey M. Smith

Spilling the Beans, October 2006


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Dear friend,

Consider passing this article on to those in the food and 
agricultural industries. It provides a reasonable, if not urgent, 
strategy for them to protect their markets, while protecting our 
health and environment at the same time.

Jeffrey


Rice Industry: Keep Genetically Engineered Varieties in the Lab

By Jeffrey M. Smith

The US rice industry can take a lesson from Hawaiian coffee growers. 
In 2004, the University of Hawaii and others were getting dangerously 
close to conducting outdoor trials of genetically modified (GM) 
coffee - plants whose DNA had been artificially inserted with genes 
from other species. Growers throughout the state knew if their 
premium coffee became contaminated with GM varieties, it would 
threaten their markets.

The growers rejected claims that small buffer zones around GM fields 
would protect them. Bees carry pollen for miles. GM crops can get 
mixed up by human error. And everyone on the islands knows that seeds 
naturally travel. (Consider Hawaii's conversion from lava rock to a 
lush paradise.)

They extracted a promise from the University to discontinue studies 
that could lead to outdoor GM coffee trials, saving their farms from 
contamination. Not so for the rice industry, which just saw world 
markets close and prices plummet after unapproved GM rice escaped 
from field trials, contaminating US stocks. Japan stopped buying long 
grain US rice, products were taken off shelves in Europe and the 
industry may lose $150 million or more.

Amid the lawsuits and rejected shipments, the rice industry must now 
decide whether to belatedly follow the coffee growers' example. They 
can tell the government and five multinational GM crop companies, "No 
more GM rice trials!" Or they can continue to risk costly episodes of 
contamination. And for what? To share the fate of soybean and corn 
growers?

In 1996, biotech companies introduced GM soy and corn varieties that 
could either withstand herbicide or produce pesticides in every cell. 
Although the new technology was largely hidden from American 
shoppers, the European press did extensive coverage and consumers 
there were not pleased. In a single week in April 1999, food 
companies throughout the continent responded by vowing to remove GM 
ingredients from their European brands. Japanese companies followed 
suit and American agriculture has yet to recover.

The corn industry lost their $300 million European market; US soy 
sales also plunged. The government poured an extra $2-3 billion per 
year in price support subsidies. And many non-GM growers were forced 
to pay for costly segregation programs just to keep their customers. 
The promise of higher yields, lower chemical use and weed-free living 
through GM crops turned into slightly lower average yields, 
significantly higher herbicide use and the emergence of superweeds 
that resist weed killer. Many who were once enthusiastic about GM 
technology are saying "Come back in 50 to 100 years when you've done 
your homework."

The Biotech PR firms want the rice industry and others to believe 
that gene inserted crops are catching on around the world. In 
reality, studies show that the more people learn about GM food, the 
less they want to put it in their mouth. The main reason why most US 
consumers are complacent is that they don't know about the issue. 
Sixty percent say they have never eaten a GM food in their lives. In 
truth, most eat it everyday - usually in the form of soy and corn 
derivatives in processed foods.

When Americans find out that they have been eating GM ingredients, 
they usually assume that the FDA has tested it and proven it safe. 
Not true. Documents made public from a lawsuit revealed that FDA 
scientists had repeatedly warned their superiors that GM foods might 
create unpredictable, hard-to-detect allergies, toxins, new diseases 
and nutritional problems. They urged political appointees to require 
long-term safety studies. But the person in charge of FDA policy was 
the former attorney (and later vice president) of biotech giant 
Monsanto. And the agency was under orders from the White House to 
promote GM crops. The policy that was adopted in 1992, and still 
stands, is that no safety tests whatsoever are required by the FDA. 
Thus, varieties that had never been rigorously safety tested with 
animals, and probably never even fed to humans, were approved for 
sale.

Evidence of adverse reactions is mounting. From the tiny number of 
safety studies that have been conducted, animals treated with GM 
crops show stunted growth, impaired immune systems, bleeding 
stomachs, potentially precancerous cell growth, damaged and misshapen 
cells, inflamed kidneys, smaller brains and testicles, enlarged 
intestines, reduced digestive enzymes, higher blood sugar, inflamed 
lung tissue, increased death rates and higher offspring mortality, to 
name a few. Reports from the field are less encouraging. Two dozen US 
farmers say that sterility in pigs or cows is related to GM corn 
varieties. Seventy-one Indian shepherds report that 25% of their 
sheep died from grazing on GM cotton plants. Filipinos in at least 5 
villages fell sick when nearby GM corn was pollinating. And hundreds 
of laborers in India developed allergic reactions after handling GM 
cotton. Soy allergies skyrocketed by 50% in the UK soon after GM soy 
was introduced. And in the 1980s, a GM food supplement killed about 
100 Americans and caused sickness and disability in another 
5,000-10,000.

If this information makes you uneasy, consider what will happen when 
millions of US consumers learn that high-risk GM foods are in their 
baby's formula and kids' breakfast cereal. The reaction may force US 
food manufacturers to repeat the vows of their European counterparts. 
The corn and soy growers would surely be hit even harder than before.

How will the rice industry fare? That depends on what they choose 
now. But the choice is not just with rice growers. What about those 
who deal in lettuce, barley, sunflowers and plums? Most vegetables, 
fruits and grains have GM counterparts in some stage of development. 
And behind that variety stands a biotech company, more than willing 
to grow it field trials and risk the food industry's markets. Even 
the US wheat growers remain in danger. They had forced Monsanto to 
abandon plans to introduce GM wheat in May 2004, but unlike Hawaii's 
coffee growers, they can still be contaminated from outdoor field 
trials.

It is time that US producers take charge and say to the biotech 
industry, "You can grow your GM crops only when we are ready to take 
that risk. Until then, keep it in the lab."

 

Jeffrey M. Smith is the author of Seeds of Deception, the world's 
bestselling book on GM foods. His forthcoming book, Genetic Roulette, 
documents more than 60 health risks of GM foods in easy-to-read 
two-page spreads, and demonstrates how current safety assessments are 
not competent to protect consumers from the dangers. He is available 
for media at 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Spilling the Beans is a monthly column available at 
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The Institute for Responsible Technology is working to end the 
genetic engineering of our food supply and the outdoor release of GM 
crops. We warmly welcome your donations and support.

Go to 
<http://www.responsibletechnology.org/>www.responsibletechnology.org 
or click 
<http://www.responsibletechnology.org/utility/showArticle/?objectID=17 
1>here if you'd like to make a tax-deductible donation. Click 
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to become a member of the Institute for Responsible Technology. 
Membership to the Institute for Responsible Technology costs $25 per 
year. New members receive The GMO Trilogy, a three-disc set produced 
by Jeffrey Smith (see <http://www.gmotrilogy.com/>www.GMOTrilogy.com).


© copyright Jeffrey M. Smith 2006

 


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