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UCS는 우리의 새로운 광고운동을 공유하여 정확히 짚고 넘어가는 걸 돕는다


몬산토의 광고는 농산업의 거대한 업적에 대해 인상적으로 이야기한다: 늘어나는 인구의 부양. 자연자원의 보호. 생물다양성의 촉진. 

멋지게 들리지만, 불행히도 함정이 있다: 이러한 주장은 과장되고, 오도되거나 철저한 거짓이다. 몬산토의 제품 —그리고 그들이 조장하는 농법— 은 기업의 이윤을 유지시키지만, 우리의 식량과 농법의 변화에 진정으로 지속가능한 해결책을 가져오는 데에는 장애물이란 여러 증거가 밝혀졌다. 

아래의 광고들에서 우린 USC의 분석을 통해 수집한 몇몇 사실들과 함께 몬산토의 자기만족적 수사법을 깨버린다. 친구들과 이를 공유하고 퍼뜨리자: 건강한 농법이 실행될 때 문산토는 실패한다!


(사진을 클릭하면 크게 볼 수 있음)





#1: 더 많은 제초제 + 더 적은 나비 = 더 나은 씨앗?

몬산토는 말한다: "농부의 손에서, 더 나은 씨앗은 우리의 빠르게 늘어나는 인구의 수요를 충족시키면서 지구의 자연자원을 보호하는 데 도움이 될 수 있다."

사실: 몬산토의  Roundup 제초제에 저항성을 갖도록 유전자조작된 Roundup Ready 작물은 1996~2008년 사이 제초제 사용을 3억 8300만 파운드로 증가시켰다고 추정된다. 그리고 라운드업 레디가 도입된 이후 서식지가 파괴된 덕에 왕나비(Monarch butterflies)는 81%의 더 적은 알을 낳는다





#2: 슈퍼잡초의 번성

몬산토는 말한다: "우리의 급속한 인구 성장은 압력을 높여 자원 -땅, 물, 에너지와 같은- 의 한계에 처하게 만들고 있다."

사실: 그 과제는 현실이지만, 몬산토의 제품은 해답이 아니다. UCS의 분석은 지금까지 GE 작물이 미국의 수확량을 개선시키는 데 매우 작은 기여만 했음을 밝혔다. 한편 —빠르게 성장하는 인구에 대한 답으로— 라운드업 레디 작물을 남용하는 것은 "슈퍼잡초"의 비극을 낳고, 미국 농민들에게 엄청난 문제를 일으키고 있다.





#3: 가뭄 저항성에 대한 완전 거짓

몬산토는 말한다: "올바른 도구와 함께 농민은 더 많은 미래세대를 위해 자연을 보존할 수 있다."

사실: 농민이 더 많은 물을 보존하길 바란다면, 몬산토의 DroughtGard 옥수수는 올바른 도구가 아니다. UCS의 최근 연구는 농민이 물 사용을 줄이는 데에 DroughtGard가 도움이 되지 않는다는 사실을 발견했다 —그리고 유전자조작된 가뭄 저항성은 일반적 가뭄의 상황에만 도움이 될 것이다. (연구는 유기농업의 방법이 가뭄이 든 해의 수확량을 96%까지 높인다는 걸 밝혔다.)

 



출처 http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/science_and_impacts/impacts_genetic_engineering/monsanto-fails-at-improving.html

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LONDON, UK - Aren't critics of genetically engineered food anti-science? Isn't the debate over GMOs (genetically modified organisms) a spat between emotional but ignorant activists on one hand and rational GM-supporting scientists on the other?

A new report released today, "GMO Myths and Truths",[1] challenges these claims. The report presents a large body of peer-reviewed scientific and other authoritative evidence of the hazards to health and the environment posed by genetically engineered crops and organisms (GMOs).

Unusually, the initiative for the report came not from campaigners but from two genetic engineers who believe there are good scientific reasons to be wary of GM foods and crops.

One of the report's authors, Dr Michael Antoniou of King's College London School of Medicine in the UK, uses genetic engineering for medical applications but warns against its use in developing crops for human food and animal feed.

Dr Antoniou said: "GM crops are promoted on the basis of ambitious claims - that they are safe to eat, environmentally beneficial, increase yields, reduce reliance on pesticides, and can help solve world hunger.

"I felt what was needed was a collation of the evidence that addresses the technology from a scientific point of view.

"Research studies show that genetically modified crops have harmful effects on laboratory animals in feeding trials and on the environment during cultivation. They have increased the use of pesticides and have failed to increase yields. Our report concludes that there are safer and more effective alternatives to meeting the world's food needs."

Another author of the report, Dr John Fagan, is a former genetic engineer who in 1994 returned to the National Institutes of Health $614,000 in grant money owing to concerns about the safety and ethics of the technology. He subsequently founded a GMO testing company.

Dr Fagan said: "Crop genetic engineering as practised today is a crude, imprecise, and outmoded technology. It can create unexpected toxins or allergens in foods and affect their nutritional value. Recent advances point to better ways of using our knowledge of genomics to improve food crops, that do not involve GM.

"Over 75% of all GM crops are engineered to tolerate being sprayed with herbicide. This has led to the spread of herbicide-resistant superweeds and has resulted in massively increased exposure of farmers and communities to these toxic chemicals. Epidemiological studies suggest a link between herbicide use and birth defects and cancer.

"These findings fundamentally challenge the utility and safety of GM crops, but the biotech industry uses its influence to block research by independent scientists and uses its powerful PR machine to discredit independent scientists whose findings challenge this approach."

The third author of the report, Claire Robinson, research director of Earth Open Source, said, "The GM industry is trying to change our food supply in far-reaching and potentially dangerous ways. We all need to inform ourselves about what is going on and ensure that we - not biotechnology companies - keep control of our food system and crop seeds.

"We hope our report will contribute to a broader understanding of GM crops and the sustainable alternatives that are already working successfully for farmers and communities."

ENDS

Notes

1. The report, "GMO Myths and Truths, An evidence-based examination of the claims made for the safety and efficacy of genetically modified crops", by Michael Antoniou, PhD, Claire Robinson, and John Fagan, PhD is published by Earth Open Source (June 2012). The report is 123 pages long and contains over 600 citations, many of them from the peer-reviewed scientific literature and the rest from reports by scientists, physicians, government bodies, industry, and the media. The report is available here: http://earthopensource.org/index.php/reports/58
A shorter summary version will be released in the coming weeks.

News points from the report

1. Genetic engineering as used in crop development is not precise or predictable and has not been shown to be safe. The technique can result in the unexpected production of toxins or allergens in food that are unlikely to be spotted in current regulatory checks.

2. GM crops, including some that are already in our food and animal feed supply, have shown clear signs of toxicity in animal feeding trials - notably disturbances in liver and kidney function and immune responses.

3. GM proponents have dismissed these statistically significant findings as "not biologically relevant/significant," based on scientifically indefensible arguments.

4. Certain EU-commissioned animal feeding trials with GM foods and crops are often claimed by GM proponents to show they are safe. In fact, examination of these studies shows significant differences between the GM-fed and control animals that give cause for concern.

5. GM foods have not been properly tested in humans, but the few studies that have been carried out in humans give cause for concern.

6. The US FDA does not require mandatory safety testing of GM crops, and does not even assess the safety of GM crops but only "deregulates" them, based on assurances from biotech companies that they are "substantially equivalent" to their non-GM counterparts. This is like claiming that a cow with BSE is substantially equivalent to a cow that does not have BSE and is thus safe to eat! Claims of substantial equivalence cannot be justified on scientific grounds.

7. The regulatory regime for GM foods is weakest in the US, where GM foods do not even have to be assessed for safety or labelled in the marketplace, but in most regions of the world regulations are inadequate to protect people's health from the potential adverse effects of GM foods.

8. In the EU, where the regulatory system is often claimed to be strict, minimal pre-market testing is required for a GMO and the tests are commissioned by the same companies that stand to profit from the GMO if it is approved - a clear conflict of interest.

9. No long-term toxicological testing of GMOs on animals or testing on humans is required by any regulatory agency in the world.

10. Biotech companies have used patent claims and intellectual property protection laws to restrict access of independent researchers to GM crops for research purposes. As a result, limited research has been conducted on GM foods and crops by scientists who are independent of the GM industry. Scientists whose work has raised concerns about the safety of GMOs have been attacked and discredited in orchestrated campaigns by GM crop promoters.

11. Most GM crops (over 75%) are engineered to tolerate applications of herbicides. Where such GM crops have been adopted, they have led to massive increases in herbicide use.

12. Roundup, the herbicide that over 50% of all GM crops are engineered to tolerate, is not safe or benign as has been claimed but has been found to cause malformations (birth defects), reproductive problems, DNA damage, and cancer in test animals. Human epidemiological studies have found an association between Roundup exposure and miscarriage, birth defects, neurological development problems, DNA damage, and certain types of cancer.

13. A public health crisis has erupted in GM soy-producing regions of South America, where people exposed to spraying with Roundup and other agrochemicals sprayed on the crop report escalating rates of birth defects and cancer.

14. A large number of studies indicate that Roundup is associated with increased crop diseases, especially infection with Fusarium, a fungus that causes wilt disease in soy and can have toxic effects on humans and livestock.

15. Bt insecticidal GM crops do not sustainably reduce pesticide use but change the way in which pesticides are used: from sprayed on, to built in.

16. Bt technology is proving unsustainable as pests evolve resistance to the toxin and secondary pest infestations are becoming common.

17. GM proponents claim that the Bt toxin engineered into GM plants is safe because the natural form of Bt, long used as a spray by conventional and organic farmers, has a history of safe use. But the GM forms of Bt toxins are different from the natural forms and could have different toxic and allergenic effects.

18. GM Bt toxin is not limited in its toxicity to insect pests. GM Bt crops have been found to have toxic effects on laboratory animals in feeding trials.

19. GM Bt crops have been found to have toxic effects on non-target organisms in the environment.

20. Bt toxin is not fully broken down in digestion and has been found circulating in the blood of pregnant women in Canada and in the blood supply to their foetuses.

21. The no-till method of farming promoted with GM herbicide-tolerant crops, which avoids ploughing and uses herbicides to control weeds, is not more climate-friendly than ploughing. No-till fields do not store more carbon in the soil than ploughed fields when deeper levels of soil are measured.

22. No-till increases the negative environmental impacts of soy cultivation, because of the herbicides used.

23. Golden Rice, a beta-carotene-enriched rice, is promoted as a GM crop that could help malnourished people overcome vitamin A deficiency. But Golden Rice has not been tested for toxicological safety, has been plagued by basic development problems, and, after more than 12 years and millions of dollars of research funding, is still not ready for the market. Meanwhile, inexpensive and effective solutions to vitamin A deficiency are available but under-used due to lack of funding.

24. GM crops are often promoted as a "vital tool in the toolbox" to feed the world's growing population, but many experts question the contribution they could make, as they do not offer higher yields or cope better with drought than non-GM crops. Most GM crops are engineered to tolerate herbicides or to contain a pesticide - traits that are irrelevant to feeding the hungry.

25. High adoption of GM crops among farmers is not a sign that the GM crop is superior to non-GM varieties, as once GM companies gain control of the seed market, they withdraw non-GM seed varieties from the market. The notion of "farmer choice" does not apply in this situation.

26. GM contamination of non-GM and organic crops has resulted in massive financial losses by the food and feed industry, involving product recalls, lawsuits, and lost markets.

27. When many people read about high-yielding, pest- and disease-resistant, drought-tolerant, and nutritionally improved super-crops, they think of GM. In fact, these are all products of conventional breeding, which continues to outstrip GM in producing such crops. The report contains a long list of these conventional crop breeding successes.

28. Certain "supercrops" have been claimed to be GM successes when in fact they are products of conventional breeding, in some cases assisted by the non-GM biotechnology of marker assisted selection.

29. Conventional plant breeding, with the help of non-GM biotechnologies such as marker assisted selection, is a safer and more powerful method than GM to produce new crop varieties required to meet current and future needs of food production, especially in the face of rapid climate change.

30. Conventionally bred, locally adapted crops, used in combination with agroecological farming practices, offer a proven, sustainable approach to ensuring global food security.

About the authors

Michael Antoniou, PhD is reader in molecular genetics and head, Gene expression and Therapy Group, King's College London School of Medicine, London, UK. He has 28 years' experience in the use of genetic engineering technology investigating gene organisation and control, with over 40 peer reviewed publications of original work, and holds inventor status on a number of gene expression biotechnology patents. Dr Antoniou has a large network of collaborators in industry and academia who are making use of his discoveries in gene control mechanisms for the production of research, diagnostic and therapeutic products and human somatic gene therapies for inherited and acquired genetic disorders.

John Fagan, PhD is a leading authority on sustainability in the food system, biosafety, and GMO testing. He is founder and chief scientific officer of Global ID Group, a company with subsidiaries involved in GMO food testing and GMO-free certification. He is a director of Earth Open Source. Earlier, he conducted cancer research at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) and in academia. He holds a PhD in biochemistry and molecular and cell biology from Cornell University.

Dr Fagan became an early voice in the scientific debate on genetic engineering when in 1994 he took an ethical stand challenging the use of germ line gene therapy (which has subsequently been banned in most countries) and genetic engineering in agriculture. He underlined his concerns by returning a grant of around $614,000 to the US National Institutes of Health, awarded for cancer research that used genetic engineering as a research tool. He was concerned that knowledge generated in his research could potentially be misused to advance human germ-line genetic engineering (for example, to create "designer babies"), which he found unacceptable on grounds of both safety and ethics. For similar reasons, around the same time, he withdrew applications for two additional grants totalling $1.25 million from the NIH and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). In 1996 he started Global ID when he saw that GMO testing could be useful to assist industry in providing consumers with the transparency that they desired regarding the presence of GMOs in foods.

Claire Robinson, MPhil is research director at Earth Open Source. She has a background in investigative reporting and the communication of topics relating to public health, science and policy, and the environment. She is an editor at GMWatch (www.gmwatch.org), a public information service on issues relating to genetic modification, and was formerly managing editor at SpinProfiles (now Powerbase).

Earth Open Source

Earth Open Source (www.earthopensource.org) is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to assuring the sustainability, security, and safety of the global food system. It supports agroecological, farmer-based systems that conserve soil, water, and energy and that produce healthy and nutritious food free from unnecessary toxins. It challenges the use of pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, and genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in agriculture on the grounds of the scientifically proven hazards that they pose to health and the environment and on the grounds of the negative social and economic impacts of these technologies. Earth Open Source holds that our crop seeds and food system are common goods that belong in the hands of farmers and citizens, not of the GMO and chemical industry. Earth Open Source has established four lines of action, each of which fulfils a specific aspect of its mission:
• Science and policy platform
• Scientific research
• Citizens' learning and action
• Sustainable rural development.



http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO1206/S00463/why-genetically-engineered-food-is-dangerous.htm

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씨앗은 상실, 통제, 의존, 부채와 관련된 이야기의 하나가 되었다. 그건 진정한 비용이 아니라 식량체계를 통해 막대한 이윤을 얻으려고 하는 사람들에 의해 작성되었다. 이제 그 이야기를 바꿀 때이다.


The Gaia Foundation과 African Biodiversity Network의 역사적 영상 

Jeremy Irons가 해설. 

자유의 씨앗(Seeds of Freedom)은 지금은 지구적 식량체계를 독점하고자 사용되어 강력한 상품으로 변질되었지만, 전 세계에 걸쳐 전통적이고 다양성이 풍부한 농업체계의 핵심에서 그 근간이 되는 씨앗의 이야기를 보여준다. 이 영상은 공업형 농업체계의 확장, 그리고 특히 유전자조작(GM) 종자가 농사를 시작한 이후 전 세계의 농민과 공동체가 함께 발전시켜온 광대한 농업생물다양성에 타격을 준다는 것을 강조한다.

자유의 씨앗은 유전자조작에 찬성하는 로비꾼들이 조장하는 대규모 공업형 농업이 세계를 먹여 살릴 수 있는 유일한 길이라는 주문에 도전하고자 한다. 씨앗 이야기를 추적하면서 어떻게 기업의 의제가 막대한 이윤을 만들고 세계의 식량체계를 통제하려고 추동하는지 명백하게 밝혀진다.

Vandana Shiva  박사와 Henk Hobbelink과 같은 국제적 전문가와의 인터뷰 및 아프리카 농민의 목소리를 통하여 이 영상은 어떻게 토종 종자들의 상실이 생물다양성과 그와 관련된 전통지식의 상실로 이어지는지, 문화적 전통과 실천의 상실로 이어지는지, 생활수단의 상실로 이어지는지, 식량주권의 상실로 이어지는지 밝힌다. 그러한 압박이 수천년 동안 소규모 농민이 육종해왔던 다양하고, 영양이 풍부하고, 지역에 적합하며 씨앗을 받을 수 있는 종자를 유전자조작 종자의 대규모 단작으로 대체시키고 있다.

이 영상은 토착 농경공동체의 이야기꾼과 함께 Navdanya의 반다나 시바 박사, GRAIN의 행크 호버린크, Zac Goldsmith MP(영국 보수당), 캐나다의 농부 Percy Schmeiser, 그린피스의 Kumi Naidoo, 아프리카 생물다양성네트워크의 Gathuru Mburu, 가이아재단의 Liz Hosken Caroline Lucas MP(영국 녹색당)와 같은 세계적 전문가와 활동가가 등장하는 것이 특징이다. 

이 영상은 The Gaia Foundation과 African Biodiversity Network가 공동으로 제작했다. GRAIN, Navdanya International,  MELCA Ethiopia가 협력했다. 

사진은 Andrew Ogilvy가 찍은 Jeremy Irons.


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Monsanto and the Gates Foundation claim genetically modified crops will revolutionize agriculture in Kenya, but critics warn the technology is ill-suited to the needs of farmers.


NAIROBI, Kenya—In the sprawling hills of the Kangundo district in Kenya’s Eastern Province, just a few hours outside of capital city Nairobi, Fred Kiambaa has been farming the same small, steep plot of land for more than 20 years.

Born and raised just outside Kathiini Village in Kangundo, Kiambaa knows the ups and downs of agriculture in this semi-arid region. He walks up a set of switchbacks to Kangundo’s plateaus to tend his fields each morning and seldom travels further than a few miles from his plot.

Right now, all that remains of his maize crop are rows of dry husks. Harvest season finished just two weeks ago, and the haul was meager this time around.

“Water is the big problem, it’s always water. We have many boreholes, but when there is no rain, it’s still difficult,” he said.

Kiambaa and his wife, Mary, only harvested 440 pounds of maize this season, compared to their usual 2,200. They have six children, meaning there will be many lean months before the next harvest, and worse: Though March is Kenya’s rainiest month, it’s been mostly dry so far.

“The rain surely is not coming well this year. Rain is the key. We can only pray,” he said.

WONDER CROPS?

Farmers like Kiambaa are central to a push to deploy genetically modified (GM) technology within Kenya. In recent years, donors such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have invested millions of dollars into researching, developing and promoting GM technology, including drought-resistant maize, within the country — and have found a great deal of success in doing so through partnerships with local NGOs and government bodies.

The Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI), a semi-autonomous government research institution, recently announced that after years of trials, genetically modified drought-resistant maize seeds will be available to Kenyan farmers within the next five years. Trial GM drought-resistant cotton crops are already growing in Kidoko, 240 miles southeast of Nairobi.

Researchers and lobbyists argue that in a country so frequently stricken by food shortages, scientific advancements can put food into hungry bellies. Drought-resistant seeds and vitamin-enriched crops could be agricultural game changers, they say.

But serious concerns about viability, corporate dependency and health effects linger — even while leading research firms and NGOs do their best to smooth them over.

Agriculture dominates Kenya’s economy, although more than 80 percent of its land is too dry and infertile for efficient cultivation. Kenya is the second largest seed consumer in sub-Saharan Africa, and Nairobi is a well-known hub for agricultural research. According to the Ministry of Agriculture, farming is the largest contributor to Kenya’s gross domestic product, and 75 percent of Kenyans made their living by farming in 2006.

Half of the country’s total agricultural output is non-marketed subsistence production — meaning farms like Kiambaa’s, where nothing is sold and everything is consumed.

On top of that, the country is still reeling from the worst drought in half a century, which affected an estimated 13 million people across the Horn of Africa in 2011. Kenya is home to the world’s largest refugee camp, housing 450,000 Somalis fleeing violence and famine, increasing the pressure to deal with food security challenges.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga recently called on parliament to assist the estimated 4.8 million Kenyans, in a country of about 40 million, who still rely on government food supports, as analysts predict that this year’s rainy season will be insufficient to guarantee food security.

“The situation is not good... Arid and semi-arid regions have not recovered from the drought,” Odinga said.

At the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), a massive NGO working on GM research and development in partnership with KARI, Regulatory Affairs Manager Dr. Francis Nang’ayo says GM crops are “substantially equivalent” to non-genetically modified foods and should be embraced as a solution to persistent drought and hunger.

In 2008, the AATF received a $47 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. This partnership involved the Howard G. Buffett Foundation and American seed giant Monsanto.

In 2005, the Water-Efficient Maize for Africa (WEMA) program became one of the first main partners in a program aimed at developing drought-resistant maize for small-scale African farmers. Monsanto promised to provide seeds for free. The Gates Foundation claimed at the time that biotechnology and GM crops would help end poverty and food insecurity in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2010, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Gates Foundation had invested $27.6 million in Monsanto shares.

Donors had been investing millions in KARI for decades in an effort to develop seeds that would produce pest- and disease-resistant plants and produce higher yields. Monsanto promised results, with the goal of distributing its seeds to small-scale farmers across Kenya, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda.

Since then WEMA’s African partners have made major strides in bringing GM crops to Kenya, most notably when KARI announced in March that it is set to introduce genetically modified maize to farmers’ fields by 2017. Until 2008, South Africa had been the only country using GM technology. Now Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi, Mali, Zimbabwe, Nigeria and Ghana are researching GM seeds and growing trial crops of cotton, maize and sorghum.

“Five years ago it was only South Africa that had a clear policy. Since then a number of countries have put their acts together by publishing policies on GM technology laws. In Kenya we’re moving on to create institutional mechanisms,” said Dr. Nang’ayo.

Deeply Divided

But Nang’ayo and his team face several challenges. Popular opinion on the technology is deeply divided in Kenya, in large part due to suspicions about the giant foreign corporations that control it.

Monsanto-patented seeds are usually costly, which has led to numerous accusations of exploitation and contemporary colonialism. But how long will these particular strains of seeds last? What are the guarantees? Critics fear dependence on corporate fertilizers and pesticides, the emergence of super-weeds and pests that can no longer repel GM varieties, and terminator seeds that only last for one planting season.

At Seattle’s AGRA Watch, a project of the Community Alliance for Global Justice, director Heather Day said there aren’t enough questions being asked about introducing GM technology to developing countries.

“Our campaign started because of our concern about the Gates Foundation’s influence on agriculture and the lack of transparency and accountability. We also have ecological concerns, in terms of food sovereignty and farmers’ ability to control their food system. We need to be concerned about the industrialization of the agricultural system,” she said.

AGRA Watch’s objective is to monitor and question the Gates Foundation’s push for a “green revolution” in Africa.

Monsanto has promised an indefinite supply of royalty-free seeds for this project, but Day said the pitfalls have the potential to devastate the continent’s agriculture.

“Genetically modified crops actually haven’t been that successful,” Day said. “We’ve seen massive crop failure in South Africa, and farmers there couldn’t get financial remedies or compensation for their losses. There’s genetic resistance and super-pests, these things are happening now, and it’s not surprising. It’s what you would expect from an ecological standpoint.”

The horror stories are real — in India, for example, farmers who purchased Bollgard I cotton seeds from 2007 to 2009 wound up spending four times the price of regular seeds, and paying dearly for it. It was believed that Monsanto’s patented GM seeds would be resistant to pink bollworms, which were destroying cotton crops across swaths of India, but by 2010 Monsanto officials were forced to admit that the seed had failed and a newer breed of far more aggressive pests had emerged. The solution? Bollgard II, an even stronger GM cotton seed.

As of December 2011, Monsanto was actively promoting the latest Bollgard III cotton seed, stronger than ever before. Pesticide spending in India skyrocketed between 2007 and 2009, forcing thousands of farmers into crushing debt, and hundreds more into giving up their land. Some media outlets later drew a connection between the Bollgard debacle and a rash of suicides across farms that had purchased the seeds.

Land Grabs

Kenya is a country where land-grabbing is all too common, be it on the coast to make way for new tourist resorts, or in Nairobi, where slum demolitions left hundreds homeless when the government bulldozed several apartment buildings to reclaim an area near the Moi Air Base.

Farmers here are skeptical of risking everything for a few seasons of higher yields. In Kangundo, Kiambaa said he would try GM technology if it was a matter of life or death — but he is wary.

Kiambaa uses the Katumani breed of maize, a widely available seed that is reasonably drought-tolerant and affordable. Higher yields are tempting, of course, but Kiambaa said he doesn’t want to chance his livelihood on a foreign corporation. While his family has been on the land for decades now, Kiambaa said they didn’t get to farm it until British colonialists returned it to local farmers. He pointed out trees that line the steep hillside, planted by the British.

“It’s because of Mzungus that we have charcoal,” he said, smiling wryly.

After the last harvest, Kiambaa can’t even afford to use Kenya’s standard DAP fertilizer, which costs 59 cents per pound. Instead, he has a lone cow tied to a post in his fields.

“This provides the fertilizer we need. We can’t afford anything else. The maize yield could have been much better, but we know our plants will grow each year. It is better we keep it the way it is. My family has been on this land for 100 years. We have always survived,” he said.

At the National Biosafety Authority (NBA), CEO Willy Tonui claims media hysteria and inaccurate reporting are to blame for resistance to GM technology, arguing the NBA maintains stringent guidelines about GM seeds in Kenya. Referring to the plans to allow GM maize seeds in by 2017, Tonui said, “The National Biosafety Authority does not have the mandate to introduce GM maize or any other crop into Kenya. We only review applications that are submitted to the authority. To date, the authority has not received any application on commercial release of GM maize or any other crop.”

Anne Maina, advocacy coordinator for the African Biodiversity Network (ABN), a coalition of 65 Kenyan farming organizations, said that’s not a good enough answer.

“Who’s controlling the industry?” she asked. “If you are going to talk to the National Biosafety Authority, they’ll tell you the information is available, but there is a confidential business information clause where whoever is controlling the industry is not held accountable. The level of secrecy and lack of transparency is unacceptable.”

Farmers’ Needs

The ABN has actively lobbied the government since 2004 to crack down on GM technology slowly filtering into Kenya, with some measure of success. A 2009 Biosafety Act required all GM imports to pass stringent government standards before entering the country.

Maina recognizes the uphill battle she’s facing.

“Our public research institutions must shift their focus back to farmers’ needs,” she told The Indypendent, “rather than support the agenda of agribusiness, which is to colonize our food and seed chain. We believe that the patenting of seed is deeply unethical and dangerous.”

Joan Baxter is a journalist who has spent years reporting on climate change and agriculture in Africa. Reporting now from Sierra Leone, Baxter was quick to point out that even if a farmer chooses not to use GM technology, it won’t guarantee crop safety.

“Farmers are always at risk of contamination from GM seeds. That has been shown in North America. The farmers [in Africa] may lose their own seeds, perhaps be given GM seeds for a year or two, then have to purchase them and be stuck in the trap and in debt,” she said.

Like Maina, Baxter sees a problem in how GM technology is being marketed, and slowly introduced, into African countries, under the guise of ending famine. With climate change becoming an increasingly influential factor in the GM debate, Baxter said companies claiming to help are only looking for profit.

“Basically this is disaster capitalism. The disaster of hunger and drought, climate change and policy-related, is now a profit opportunity for Monsanto and Syngenta. The Gates Foundation buying shares in Monsanto tells you what the real agenda is: To get GMOs in Africa,” she said.

In 2010, NBA’s CEO resigned after it was revealed that 280,000 tonnes of GM maize had found its way into Kenya from South Africa through the Port of Mombasa.

Farmers mobilized en masse after the Dreyfus scandal (named for the South African company responsible for shipping the seeds) was revealed, marching on Parliament to demand an end to secret imports. After the most recent GM announcement, however, there were no protests. The long rains that would ensure a good yield haven’t come. The drought may continue.

Added to the potential problems with GM technology are health risks—the strains of maize that were illegally imported in 2010 had been deemed unsafe for children and the elderly. Maina also worries about animal feeding trials that showed damage to liver, kidney and pancreas, effects on fertility, and stomach bleeding in livestock that has consumed GM feed. A more recent study carried out on pregnant women in Canada found genetically modified insecticidal proteins in their blood streams and in that of their unborn children, despite assurances from scientists that it wasn’t possible.

The political scandal that erupted after 2010’s illegal imports brought GM technology into the forefront of Kenyan public debate, but last year’s massive drought has shifted public and political discourse. The ABN doesn’t have a $47 million grant to keep it going, and the pressures it faces from politicians and corporations, now waging their own propaganda war, are overwhelming.

GM Treadmill

At the McLaughlin-Rotman Centre for Global Health in Toronto, researchers recently released a report titled “Factors in the adoption and development of agro-biotechnology in sub-Saharan Africa.” The report, which was financed by a grant by the Gates Foundation, came to the conclusion that “poor communication is affecting agbiotech adoption,” and that “widespread dissemination of information at the grassroots level and can spread misinformation and create extensive public concern and distrust for agbiotech initiatives.”

Lead researcher Obidimma Ezezika declined to comment on Monsanto’s involvement with GM technology, and denied that his team was creating corporate propaganda.

“I think it is important to actively and soberly engage in the debate by offering facts to the policy makers, media and public on ag-biotech which will dispel fears and anxieties,” he told The Indypendent.

The mounting evidence, health questions and political scandals all mean Kenya would be wisest to take a step back before jumping on board the GM train, says Maina.

“Our key concern is that the development of insecticides and pesticides is primarily the emergence of companies getting farmers to buy highly toxic chemicals, which they will become totally dependent on. We don’t yet know the extent of the health risks posed, nor how we are expected to trust companies that have a record of putting small farmers out of business. It is time for sober second thought,” she said.


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멕시코는 나프타를 체결한 이후 농촌 지역사회가 급격히 무너졌다. 지금 이 순간에도 많은 멕시코인들이 농촌을 버리고 도시로 이주하고 있으며, 또 일부는 미국 국경을 넘어가고 있을지도 모른다. 그렇게 농촌이 무너지고 농민들이 도시로, 미국으로 빠져나가면서 자연스레 토종 종자로 농사짓는 소농도 사라졌다. 그리고 그들이 버리고 간 땅은 대규모 농장으로 변하여 유전자조작 옥수수 등이 그 자리를 대신하고 있다. 

이 글은 그러한 상황의 멕시코의 한쪽에서 토종 종자를 보존하려는 움직임이 있다는 소식이다. 우리의 농촌, 농민의 상황과 다르지 않은 멕시코. 그들이 어떻게 이 거친 파도를 헤치고 토종 종자의 보존과 소농의 활성화라는 과제를 해결할지 궁금하다. 물론 우리의 농촌, 농민도 마찬가지의 상황이라는 것은 더 말할 필요가 없다. (오역, 의역이 난무하니 영어에 자신 있는 분은 맨 아래 출처로 가서 보세요.)




멕시코 SAN JUAN IXTENCO, 2012년 4월 4일 (IPS) - 자신의 작은 텃밭에서 호박, 콩, 무엇보다 옥수수를 재배하는 87세의 소농 Catalina Salvador 할머니는 유전자조작 작물에 반대하여 틀락스칼라 중앙 멕시코주 산 후안 익스텐코의 전통 옥수수 축제에 참가한 사람 가운데 하나이다.

"우린 그저 심고, 9월에 수확이 잘 되기를 바란다"고 수도에서 동남쪽으로 188km 떨어진 이 마을에서 4월 1일 일요일에 열린 두번째   "Ngo r'e dethä" (나와틀어로) 옥수수 축제에 참가한 Salvador 할머니는 IPS에게 말한다.  

"우린 우리의 토종 옥수수를 잃고 싶지 않다; 우린 우리의 것이 더 낫기에 유전자조작 옥수수를 원하지 않는다"고 할머니는 말한다. 

일반 참가자와 함께 많은 소농과 학자, 활동가가  멕시코부터 니카라과까지 강력한 상징을 지닌 옥수수를 기리기 위해 멕시코에서 해마다 열리는 150개의 축제 가운데 하나에 참가했다. 

방문자들은 어디에나 있는 토르티야부터 고추로 강한 맛을 넣은 스튜인 "mole proeto"처럼 지역의 옥수수 품종으로 만든 다양한 요리를 맛볼 수 있다.  

거기에는 이 라틴아메리카 지역의 다양한 옥수수를 보여주는 적어도 75가지 품종의 완전히 흰알갱이, 빨간알갱이, 파란알갱이로 만든 깔개도 있다 –독특한 유전자 보물. 

"유전자조작 작물을 도입하겠다는 결정이 인류에게 가장 중요한 작물의 자연적 균형을 파괴하든 말든 상관없이 정부 고위층에 도달했다"고 멕시코 국립 임농축산업 연구소(INIFAP)의 연구원  Alejandro Espinosa 씨가 IPS에게 설명한다. 

"그건 정치적 결정이었다"라고 중소기업과 지역 수준의 유통에 의한 생산을 위하여 INIFAP에서 30가지 이상과 멕시코의 공공 국립자치대학(UNAM)에서 12가지 이상의 하이브리드 품종을 개발한 Espinosa 씨는 말한다.  

Espinosa 씨는 지난주 유전자조작 유기체(GMO)에 반대하는 농민과 학자가 생명공학 산업의 대표자들과 토론하는 전국적 심포지엄인 "옥수수에 관해 말하자"에 참석했다.  

2월, 한 무리의 과학자가 유전자조작 작물의 도입에 대해 우려를 표하기 위하여 농업부의 Francisco Mayorga 장관과 만났다. 

그러나 정부는 그러한 우려에 귀를 닫았다.  

농업부는 상업적 규모의 재배 이전 단계로 유전자조작 옥수수의 실험재배를 위해 적어도 140가지와 세 가지 시범사업에 대한 허가를 발표했다. 

비슷한 시험이 밀과 콩에서 실행되고 있으며, 유전자조작 목화는 2009년부터 상업적으로 심고 있다. 

미국이나 유럽과 같은 세계 각지의 GMO에 대한 경험은 멕시코에 유용한 교훈을 줄 수 있다. 

미국 환경보호청 사무소 농약 프로그램의 Steven Bradbury 부국장에게 3월 초에 보낸 편지에서, 옥수수의 해충에 대한 22명의 미국 전문가들은 서양옥수수뿌리벌레(Diabrotica virgifera virgifera)가 Bt 옥수수에 대한 내성이 높아지고 있다고 지적했다. 

자연적으로 발생하는 토양 박테리아인 뿌리벌레의 유충을 죽이는 바실러스 투린지엔시스(Bacillus thuringiensis)를 함유한 이 유전자조작 옥수수는 미국의 생명공학 거인 몬산토가 개발했다. 

"우린 뿌리벌레를 막는 옥수수의 피라미드 독성에 대한 이러한 관찰의 즉각적인 영향만이 아니라 옥수수 생산에 대한 장기적 영향의 잠재성에 관해 고민하고 있다"고 7장의 편지는 말한다.  

그리고 유럽 환경과학저널에 6명의 스위스 연구자가 2월 15일 발표한 "A controversy re-visited: Is the coccinellid Adalia bipunctata adversely affected by Bt toxins?"이란 연구는 BT옥수수의 독성이 해충을 먹기 때문에 작물에 이로운 곤충인 무당벌레 (Adalia bipunctata L)의 유충을 죽인다고 결론을 내렸다.  

농업부에 따르면, 멕시코는 750만 헥타르의 농지에서 1년에 흰옥수수 약 2200만 톤을 생산하고, 1000만 톤은 수입한다. 

또한 옥수수는 익스텐코의 또 다른 나이든 소농인 76세의 María Solís 할머니의 주요 작물이다.

"그것은 우리가 기르던 것이고, 우린 이 전통을 이어가야 한다. 농사에 가장 좋은 옥수수는 흰옥수수이지만, 나는 한 해를 기르고 그 이듬해에는 색깔 있는 걸 심는다"고 자신의 6000평 농장에 콩과 칠라카요티chilacayote도 심는 Solís 할머니는 IPS에 말한다. 

나와틀 말로 "바닷가"라는 뜻의 익스텐코에서 농민들은 씨앗을 저장하고, 이웃과 서로 바꾸며, 지역 시장에 내다판다. 널리 옥수수의 원산지로 여겨지는 틀락스칼라주의 다른 지역에서도 농민들은 유전자조작 종자의 도입에 저항할 준비를 하고 있다. 

이 토착 마을과 그를 둘러싼 농지는 틀락스칼라 자치대학의 연구자 Narciso Barrera 씨와 틀락스칼라대학의  Cristina Sánchez 씨의 연구에 따르면 18가지 품종과 2가지 고유종이 이 지역에서 재배되기에 멕시코의 옥수수 다양성을 대표한다.  

그들의 2011년 연구 "La variabilidad de semillas de maíz nativas como expresión de la diversidad biocultural en Ixtenco, Tlaxcala"(틀락스칼라 익스텐코의 생물문화다양성의 표현인 토종 옥수수 씨앗의 다양성)에서, 그들은 많은 종류의 옥수수와 그 용도는 지식, 농법, 세계관의 복합체라고 결론을 내렸다. 

GMO 재배를 승인하는 허용은 "여러 측면에서 불법은 아니지만, 국제적 약속과 의무를 무시하는 것이다"라고 Grupo de Estudios Ambientales(GEA - 환경연구모임)의  Lizy Peralta 씨는 말한다. 

"국제법에 기반하여, 유전자조작 작물이 해가 없는지 입증되지 않았기 때문에 그 재배는 제한되어야 한다"고 그녀는 IPS에 말한다. 

"옥수수는 많은 음식문화적 의미를 지니고, 이를 무시할 수 없다. 그것은 사회구조와 농촌 지역의 공동체 의식을 뒷받침한다"고 익스텐코 축제에 참여한 Peralta 씨는 말한다.  

Unión de Científicos Comprometidos con la Sociedad (UCCS, 사회에 헌신하는 과학자연합)은 생물학, 농학, 경제학, 문화학, 윤리학, 법학의 측면에서 보고서를 준비하고 있으며 GMO에 대한 대안을 제시할 것이다. 

"우린 토종 옥수수가 살아남을 수 없는 수준 너머의 한계임계점인지 아닌지 결정하는 걸 도울 수 있는 진지한 연구를 수행하고 싶다. 그러나 산업은 그것에 결코 관심을 갖지 않을 것이다"고 Espinosa 씨는 말한다. (끝)
 



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필자는 멋진 어조로 합성 생물학, 곧 유전자조작 기술을 옹호하고 있다. 이것이 바로 GMO를 지지하는 사람들의 대표적인 의견의 하나이다. 지금까지 위험한 적이 없었고, 그렇기에 앞으로도 없을 것이다. 이 기술만이 미래 인구 성장과 환경악화 등으로 위협을 받을 인류를 먹여살릴 수 있는 최고의 희망이다라는 주장... 하지만 여기에는 근본적인 성찰이 빠져 있다. 지금 당장 드러나는 현상만을 근거로 할 것이 아니라, 지금 현재의 위기가 무엇 때문에 어떻게 발생한 것인지 반성하는 근본적인 성찰이 필요하다고 생각한다. 



만약 GM이 농업의 포드 Cortina라면, 합성 생물학은 행성에 아무 해를 끼치지 않고 세계를 먹여살리는 페라리 작물을 우리에게 줄 수 있다


'자연세계’의 대처능력은 매우 중요하다. 해결책은 자연세계를 확대하는 것일 수 있다. 사진: Gianluigi Guercia/AFP/Getty Images


영국 정부는 합성 생물학(synthetic biology) –새로운 살아 있는 유기체를 만드는 과학– 이 새로운 산업혁명을 이끌 수 있으며 우선적으로 연구해야 한다고 지금 막 선언했다. 많은 환경주의자들이 그렇기는 커녕 새로운 생명체를 만드는 것이 기존의 생명체들을 위험에 빠지게 할 수 있다고 주장한다. 그러나 합성 생물학은 우리의 행성에서 생명을 보존하는 최고의 희망일 수 있다. 

인류는 계속하여 살아오면서 행성에 커다란 영향을 끼쳤다. 약 5만 년 전, 오스트레일리아의 대부분은 방랑하는 유대목의 육식동물이 잡아먹는 거대한 초식동물들이 뜯어먹던 빽빽한 열대우림으로 덮여 있었다. 1만 년 뒤 숲과 희귀동물, 육식동물은 모두 사라졌다. 무슨 일이 일어났는가? 기후변화나 생태계 붕괴와 같은 많은 설명이 제의되었지만 최근 오스트레일리아 국립대학의 Susan Rule과 동료들이 행한 꽃가루 표본에 대한 광범위한 연구는 하나의 범인을 가리킨다: 인간. 사람들이 약 4,5000년 전 북부 해안에 도착하여 파괴와 멸종의 길로 이끌도록 숲을 불태우고 대륙 전역에서 자신의 방식으로 사냥을 했다. 

비슷한 멸종의 파도가 약 1,5000년 전 아메리카의 정착에 뒤따랐다; 또한 유럽에 현생인류가 도착한 것과 함께 우리의 네안데르탈인 사촌의 사례도 그러했다. 우리가 여행한 모든 곳에서 우린 수천 종을 우리의 발로 짓이겼다.

거의 항상 위해는 무심결에 일어났다. 작물을 기르고자 토지를 쓸어내거나 화롯불에 굽기 위해 사냥하는 것과 같은 우리 자신의 성공이란 부산물의 종류로 말이다. 관행 기술은 지구의 상층 대기까지 짓밟아버리는 더 큰 발자국을 우리에게 준다. 이는 인구가 확대되고 더 많은 사람들이 서구식 생활양식을 요구할수록 더 심각해질 가능성이 높다. 자연세계의 대처능력은 매우 중요하다. 해결책은 자연세계를 확장하는 것일 수 있다. 

인간의 확장의 대부분은 자연을 조작하는 것을 통해 이루어졌다. 우리가 사냥을 다 하자 야생 오록스를 길들여 소로 만들었다. 우리가 수집하는 씨앗이 다 하자 야생 풀을 경작하고 밀과 옥수수, 벼가 되었다. 이들 각각과 많은 여타의 사육, 사양된 종들이 핸드폰이나 자동차와 같은 기술의 제품과 같다. 

그러나 미래는 과거보다 더 큰 과제에 처해 있다. 자동차에 연료를 넣고 자신의 쓰레기를 처리하면서 2050년까지 거의 10억 명을 먹여살리는 일은 행성의 처리능력을 소진시키는 위협이 된다. 

합성 생물학은 적어도 몇 가지 대답을 제공할 수 있다. 과학자들은 이미 적은 땅에서 가뭄과 병해충에 저항성을 지닌 더 많은 수확을 제공할 수 있는 유전자조작된 작물을 개발해 왔다. 그러나 합성 생물학 기술은 자동차 설계자가 기계공에 있듯이 GM에 있다. 기계공이 자동차의 성능을 개선할 수 있기에, 설계자만이 마세라티 250F를 만들 수 있다. 어설픈 수리공이 포드 Cortina를 페라리로 바꾸지 못한다.

현행 GM 작물은 농업의 포드 Cortinas이지만, 합성 생물학자는 더 넓은 스펙트럼의 영역에서 빛을 모아서 더 효율적으로 광합성을 수행하거나 화학비료가 필요없이 질소를 직접적으로 대기에서 고정시키는 페라리 작물을 만드는 것을 목표로 한다. 새로운 미생물이 먹고 독성 오염물질을 감소시키거나 농업폐기물을 전기로 전환시키도록 설계되고 있다. 

물론 위험성은 있다. 그러나 아무것도 하지 않는 것도 위험하다. 억제되지 않는 인구성장은 어떠한 합성 유기체보다 훨씬 더 많은 멸종을 일으키는 원인일 것이다. 합성 유기체의 현세대는 실험실에서 벗어난다면 쓸모없어도록 유전적인 약점을 가지게 만들어졌다. 

물론 원유 유출을 청소하는 것과 같이 사용하기 위해 합성 생물학 유기체가 실험실 밖으로 나가야 하기에 적어도 그러한 환경에 살아남도록 설계되어야 할 것이다. 그래서 방출된 합성 곤충이 우리를 죽일 수 있는가? 천문학자 Fred Hoyle 씨는 잘 알려져 있듯이 폐차장에 불어닥친 허리케인이 보잉747을 조립하는 것과 비슷하게 살아 있는 유기체가 일으키는 무작위한 힘의 가능성을 비교했다. 합성 생물학자는 원유를 먹도록 조작된 미생물이 인간에게 질병을 일으킬 수 있는 가능성이 보잉747이 달에 날아가는 가능성과 비슷할 것이라고 주장한다. 병원균과 환경의 미생물은 매우 다른 짐승이고 서로의 영역에서 성공할 가능성이 매우 낮다. 

위험이 없는 건 아무것도 없지만 합성 생물학의 선구자 GM은 아마 결코 상당한 위해를 일으키지 않는 우리가 아는 한 유일한 기술일 것이다(그리고 수백만을 먹여살리는). 지금까지 합성 생물학 기술은 극도로 안전하다. 행성에 위협이 되기는 커녕, 합성 생물학은 건강한 미래를 위한 최고의 희망이 될 것이다.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/mar/29/synthetic-biology-best-hope-mankind?newsfeed=true

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Field trials are under way in England of a genetically modified (GM) wheat that strikes fear into aphids and attracts a deadly predator to devour them, providing an alternative to the insecticides now used to control the crop pest.


LONDON (Reuters) - Field trials are under way in England of a genetically modified (GM) wheat that strikes fear into aphids and attracts a deadly predator to devour them, providing an alternative to the insecticides now used to control the crop pest.

The wheat emits a pheromone which aphids release when they are under attack to create panic and prompt the insects to flee, John Pickett, scientific leader of chemical ecology at Rothamsted Research in eastern England, said on Wednesday.

It also attracts tiny parasitoid wasps to provide a second line of defence for crops by laying eggs in the aphids.

"(It) eats the aphids from the inside out so it takes out the population on the crop," Pickett said.

"We are providing a totally new way of controlling the pests that doesn't rely on toxic modes of action," he told a media briefing.

The wheat has been modified using a gene found in peppermint plants, he added, although the smell was more like Granny Smith apples and too faint to be detected by humans.

Pickett said the field trials, at Rothamsted's research facility in Hertfordshire, used a spring planted variety of the wheat cultivar Cadenza.

He said the approach could eventually be used to protect other crops and flowers from aphids.

There are no other GM wheat trials currently being conducted in Britain although there are two involving GM potatoes.

Pete Riley, campaign director for campaign group GM Freeze, which opposes use of genetically modified organisms (GMO), said he had several concerns and believed there were better alternatives for controlling aphids.

"There are natural alternatives with which, if you design your farm right with plenty of cover and food for predators and parasitic wasps, you can control aphids pretty effectively and that has been demonstrated in the UK," he said.

"We don't see any need for this technology other than it is potentially more profitable to do GM than to tell farmers how to create the right habitats on their farms," he added.

Riley said that if the new wheat was produced commercially it could contaminate non-GMO varieties. He also questioned its effectiveness.

"We feel it is likely, if it is used very widely, that aphids would eventually get habituated to the chemical and not take any notice of it," he said.

(Reporting by Nigel Hunt; Editing by Anthony Barker)

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=trials-start-of-gm-wheat-that-terri

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Posted March 18th, 2012 by admin

Originally published by EnergyWire
by Jeremy P. Jacobs, E&E reporter
Greenwire: Thursday, March 15, 2012

Fifteen years ago, Iowa farmer George Naylor faced a huge business decision.

Chemical giant Monsanto Co. was offering new corn and soybean seeds genetically engineered to resist glyphosate, a herbicide best known as Monsanto's "Roundup." The "Roundup Ready" crops could withstand heavy doses of the chemical, eradicating weeds and making it easier to farm.

Naylor, who has been farming 470 acres since 1976, opted against the technology, fearing its unknown long-term effects.

But agribusiness went the other direction. The use of Roundup skyrocketed. There has been an increase in the use of the chemical by 46 times what was previously used, according to some calculations, and weeds that since developed a resistance to the herbicide have rendered the chemical useless across large swaths of the Midwest.

Now, Dow AgroSciences LLC is asking the Department of Agriculture to sign off on a new genetically engineered corn seed that is resistant to not only glyphosate, but also 2,4-D, a World War II-era chemical that has been associated with a host of serious health problems.

Naylor fears that if the corn is approved, the use of 2,4-D will also shoot up, eventually leading to weeds that develop their own resistance to the chemical. Industry, he said, is on the verge of stepping onto a treadmill where stronger and more toxic chemicals will be used to combat increasingly resistant weeds -- at the expense of the environment and farmers' health.

"It's a big turning point for agriculture," Naylor said. "If they are going to keep going down this road by coming up with a quick fix to the problems they created in the first place, then the problems are just going to compound.

"My neighborhood and a lot of farm neighborhoods are just going to be sacrificed zones," added the farmer, whose efforts against genetically engineered corn were chronicled by Michael Pollan in his 2006 book "The Omnivore's Dilemma." "There is going to be stuff in the air all the time."

Dow AgroSciences filed its petition with USDA last December to little fanfare. In February, the agency extended the public comment period through the end of next month.

Experts predict that if USDA approves Dow AgroSciences' petition, the use of the chemical would jump to at least five to seven times its current levels. That is particularly worrisome, public health advocates say, because unlike the relatively safe Roundup, 2,4-D -- which made up half of the notorious herbicide Agent Orange used during the Vietnam War -- is linked to birth defects, reproductive disorders, hormonal issues and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and several other cancers.

Most troubling and also unlike Roundup, 2,4-D is much more prone to drift, they say. That poses a greater threat to human health, and it could also threaten crops such as tomatoes, lettuce or cherries. The Center for Food Safety says 2,4-D is 300 times more toxic to emerging seedlings than Roundup.

"Farmers and homeowners who haven't had to deal with the serious problem of 2,4-D drift are going to be in for a rude awakening," said Gina Solomon, a scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), which wants to ban the herbicide.

On top of that, USDA's approval would likely lead to other 2,4-D-resistant crops at a time when the public is becoming increasingly skeptical of genetically engineered food, said Gary Hirshberg, the CEO of Stonyfield Farm, the organic yogurt company.

"It's the tip of the iceberg," said Hirshberg, who has lobbied Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack against the petition, in an interview.

"There will be many more 2,4-D-resistant crops forthcoming. It's akin to what we would call nuclear proliferation in another life. We're just upping the ante, and I don't see where it ends."

'Multiple layers of action'

To be clear, it is legal to use 2,4-D on corn, a point Dow AgroSciences is quick to make. It is widely used on wheat, which has a natural resistance to the chemical, and is an active ingredient in many "feed and weed" products commonly sold at home gardening stores.

U.S. EPA decided in 2005 to continue registrations of the herbicide, as have 70 countries. EPA will, however, reconsider 2,4-D's status in 2013, according to a spokesman.

Just as Naylor and public health advocates say the petition is a critical moment for genetically engineered crops, Garry Hamlin, a Dow AgroSciences spokesman, also portrayed the petition as coming at a "critical juncture" for agriculture.

To Hamlin, though, the issue is whether farmers will have access to the tools needed to keep weeds at bay while expanding the food supply.

"Weeds are always going to adapt; nature is going to adapt. That's clear," he said. "That's why you need multiple modes of action."

After 60 years of use, he continued, 2,4-D has been widely studied.

Acknowledging concerns about air drift, Hamlin said Dow AgroSciences' 2,4-D is formulated to "significantly reduce the potential for this to move off target."

He also took issue with some concerns raised by environmentalists, labeling them impractical. Without the Enlist Weed Control System, he said, many farmers won't be able to clamp down on the growing weed problem. There are currently more than 20 weed species that have developed a resistance to Roundup.

"You have to ask yourself, what is it that we'd like farmers to do that they'll do?" Hamlin said. "The solution is not to throttle back technology."

Dow AgroSciences wants to have the product ready for farmers by the 2013 growing season. And for John Davis, a corn, soybean and wheat farmer in Delaware, Ohio, the launch "can't get here soon enough."

Davis has seen the system in action and said that the air drift issue has been addressed. That is extremely important, he said, because his 4,500-acre farm is near a water source for Columbus, Ohio.

Because of his weed problem, Davis said the product will help his farm's bottom line. He did, however, recognize the concern that agriculture may be on a cycle of increasingly engineered crops and increasing use of pesticides.

"I think we are kidding ourselves if we didn't think there was a potential down the road," he said. "But I think we learned a lot from the glyphosate products."

Farmers and industry should have learned a different lesson from Roundup, said David Mortensen, a Pennsylvania State University professor who has written one of the most-cited works on the issue.

Mortensen, like Hamlin, said weeds will continue to adapt and get stronger, but Mortenson contends that the solution is not "gene pyramiding," where crops are more and more engineered to withstand multiple chemicals.

"We're going to be back to where we are right now in five to 10 years with a more complicated resistance problem," he said.

This "treadmill" for agriculture, Mortensen said, must be paused.

"The idea that we're going to solve this resistance problem by leaning on herbicides is really shortsighted, and I see it losing its efficacy very quickly," he said.

But the treadmill is very good business for chemical companies. In fact, a June 2010 Wall Street Journal article quoted John Jachetta, then a scientist with Dow AgroSciences and president of the Weed Science Society of America, saying glyphosate-resistant crops represent a "very significant opportunity" for chemical companies. "It is a new era," he said.

Public health groups are turning to legal measures to stop the 2,4-D petition. NRDC filed a petition with EPA in 2008 seeking to ban the chemical. The group then sued the agency last month to force it to take up that petition, and an EPA spokesman confirmed that the agency is now considering it (E&ENews PM, Feb. 23).

Similarly, the Pesticide Action Network, the Union of Concern Scientists, the Center for Food Safety, and Food and Water Watch are collecting public comments to submit to USDA in opposition to the company's petition. So far, their efforts have collected more than 15,000 signatures, according to a spokesman.

A USDA spokesman declined to comment on the 2,4-D petition.

Petition drives

If Dow AgroSciences' petition succeeds, it would likely guarantee that biotech corn -- the vast majority of which is bioengineered to resist glyphosate, other herbicides or insects -- would remain widely present in food available to Americans.

And that has raised the ire of many health advocates who have launched a broad campaign against genetically engineered crops.

Hirshberg's Stonyfield Farm is part of 500 organizations behind JustLabelIt.org, a campaign calling on the Food and Drug Administration to require companies to list genetically engineered ingredients. The group filed a petition with FDA to that effect last October and is encouraging the public to submit comments on its behalf.

The deadline for comments is the end of the month. So far, more than 900,000 have been submitted on the group's behalf. The group is hoping for 1 million.

"We've tapped into a gusher," he said.

The effort gained the backing of 55 lawmakers on Capitol Hill this week -- 54 Democrats and one Republican -- who sent FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg a letter urging her to adopt the petition.

"FDA has a clear opportunity to protect a consumer's right to know, the freedom to choose what we feed our families, and the integrity of our free and open markets with this petition," the lawmakers, led by Senate Environment and Public Works Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), wrote (E&E Daily, March 13).

Advocacy groups in California are also collecting signatures to put a labeling initiative on the November ballot (Greenwire, Feb. 16).

Turning back to 2,4-D, Charles Benbrook of the Organic Center said their efforts are an attempt to reverse industry's direction.

"Both the pesticide industry and farmers are going to double down on chemical methods to solve the problem," he said. "It's akin to pouring gasoline on a fire to put it out."

George Naylor contributed to the 11/2011 Food First book, Food Movements Unite!

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Caren Baginski

What is in this article?:

Industry experts help settle the battle over semantics (GE, GM, GMO?) so we all can focus on what really matters—the battle on removing these biotech foods from agriculture.

Here are the most commonly used terms surrounding genetic engineering explained according to regulations, the biotechnology industry and organic supporters.

It turns out, the famous "you like to-may-toes and I like to-mah-toes," lyric from 1937's Shall We Dance, is applicable to today's great genetically engineered (GE) food debate. While the dialect is the same, several acronyms that refer to essentially the same concept are muddying up the dialogue. Whether you use GMO, GE or GM, one thing is clear: there's something going on in our food that isn't natural.

Genetically engineered tomatoesWhy is this debate important? GE, or biotech, crops have been adopted by farmers worldwide at higher rates than any other agricultural practice in history, according to the Biotechnology Industry Organization, and since the first significant commercial plantings in 1996acreage devoted to biotech crops has increased 60-fold.

But perhaps even more important is that consumers still aren't clear on what these terms mean. In 2000, FDA conducted a series of focus groups on the terms to see what was understood and how people responded. The study found:

  • The term "modification" was seen as a vaguer, softer way of saying engineered.
  • The "bio" prefix had a positive connotation.
  • Terms such as "product of biotechnology" or "biotechnology" had the least amount of negative implication.
  • Most participants were unfamiliar with the term "Genetically Modified Organism" (GMO). It seemed to imply that foods are organisms or contain organisms, which people think is inaccurate and unappealing.

This last point was raised by an attendee at a recent GMO education session at NPA MarketPlace. Can you use GMO alone to denote GE plants? Bill Freese of the Center for Food Safety says yes. "Nothing about 'GMO' suggests organisms floating around in corn," for example, he said. "The corn is the organism, and organism is a perfectly acceptable general term to refer to living things."

The study revealed that consumers favored terms that the biotechnology industry currently uses most (chicken or the egg?) to describe a genetically engineered crop. How much has the climate changed since then? Here are the most commonly used terms explained according to regulations and industry.


Genetically Engineered (GE)

In a Sept. 1996 report on biotechnology [PDF], the National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) defined genetically engineered as "made with techniques that alter the molecular or cell biology of an organism by means that are not possible under natural conditions or processes."

The NOSB makes recommendations to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) about whether a substance should be allowed or prohibited in organic production. It outlined several GE practices in the report, including recombinant DNA, cell fusion, micro- and macro-encapsulation, gene deletion and doubling, introducing a foreign gene and changing the positions of genes. However, according to NOSB, GE does not include breeding, conjugation, fermentation, hybridization, in-vitro fertilization and tissue culture.

The USDA's current definition of genetic engineering is "manipulation of an organism's genes by introducing, eliminating or rearranging specific genes using the methods of modern molecular biology, particularly those techniques referred to as recombinant DNA techniques." The Biotechnology Industry Organization, the world's largest biotechnology organization, also refers to this regulatory definition in its literature.

Internationally, genetic engineering is defined largely by the Codex Alimentarius Commission, an organization formed in 1963 by the Food and Agriculture Organization and World Health Organization topromote coordination of all food standards work by international governmental and non-governmental organizations. Codex's definition [PDF] is similar to the United States' definition: "Genetically engineered/modified organisms, and products thereof, are produced through techniques in which the genetic material has been altered in a way that does not occur naturally by mating and/or natural recombination." Codex also says GE organisms do not include organisms resulting from transduction.

The Center for Food Safety, an organization which works to promote organic and sustainable agriculture, most commonly uses the term genetically engineered, but "in our materials we use the same definition and then suggest that the abbreviation could be GE, GM and GMO," said Rebecca Spector, West Coast Director for the Center.

The Center's definition states: "agricultural biotechnology refers to the use of recombinant DNA techniques and related tools of biotechnology to genetically engineer crops used in the production of food, feed, and fiber. The resulting products are referred to interchangeably as 'transgenic' or 'genetically engineered' crops and foods."


Genetically Modified (GM)

The terms genetically engineered (GE) and genetically modified (GM) are synonyms, said Bill Freese, Science Policy Analyst for the Center for Food Safety. The only difference among their usage lies in geographical familiarity. In Europe, genetically modified is more common, while in the U.S. genetically engineered is used.

Karen Batra, director, Food and Agriculture Communications of the Biotechnology Industry Organization also acknowledged that GE is used more in the U.S. "perhaps because the technology we're referring to here is mostly genetically engineered using recombinant DNA techniques."

The USDA's regulatory definition of genetic modification is "the production of heritable improvements in plants or animals for specific uses, via either genetic engineering or other more traditional methods."

This differs from its aforementioned GE definition by eliminating the use of "manipulation of an organism's genes" in favor of "the production of heritable improvements." The GM definition also includes "genetic engineering" but does not specifically call out "recombinant DNA techniques," and includes a mention of "more traditional methods."

The biotech industry prefers to use "genetically modified," said Freese. "The term lends itself to one of their favorite arguments: Humans have been genetically modifying plants for millennia (through natural plant breeding) and GE is just 'an extension' of that," he said. "They thus gloss over the insertional mutagenesis, the generation of novel compounds never before in our food supply, and the breaching of species barriers that are all unique to GE."


Genetically Modified Organism (GMO)

A genetically modified organism is an organism produced through genetic modification, according to the USDA. Of all the terms, GMO is the term that is most recognizable to North American consumers.

"Because consumers are more familiar with GMO, the organic and non-GMO industry has used GMO," said Spector. "Industry is using it because consumers are using it" and not the other way around.

Perhaps the term became popular thanks to recent media coverage and initiatives such as the Non-GMO Project, a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the availability of non-GMO food and products. In 2008, the Non-GMO Project began enrolling products in its 3rd party verification program. The Project's spokeswoman was unavailable at the time of publication for comment.

GMO is also used in front of a plant, such as "GMO corn." Freese said this is technically incorrect because it's redundant. "It says literally 'genetically modified organism corn.' The proper term is 'GM corn' or 'GE corn,'" he said.  

The biotechnology industry does not use the GMO term as frequently. "I tend to use 'biotech crops' or 'biotech plants' in most of my communications to avoid confusion," said Batra of Biotechnology Industry Organization.

Genetically engineered organism (GEO)

According to the USDA, GEO is an organism produced through genetic engineering. This term is rarely used.

Non-GMO

Non-GMO, as the name suggests, means an organism that has not been genetically modified. The Non-GMO Project is the only North American independent verification program that allows products to sport a "Non-GMO Project Verified" seal. In the organic industry, the term Non-GMO implies organic, and supporters of organic are worried that the extra Non-GMO label may take away from organic advocacy efforts or create an unwanted distinction between Non-GMO and organic.

Non-GE/Non-GM

These terms are not defined by the USDA and are rarely, if at all, used as synonyms for Non-GMO.

GMO free

This claim is a cue to be skeptical. "GMO free" and similar claims are not legally or scientifically defensible, according to the Non-GMO Project. This is because GMOs have proliferated so much in our food system that it is unreasonable to expect that even trace amounts have not made their way into final products. The USDA reported in 2009 that 93 percent of soy and cotton and 86 of corn grown in the U.S. was genetically engineered.


http://newhope360.com/non-gmo/whats-difference-between-ge-and-gmo?page=1

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4th March 2012

By Anthony Gucciardi

Contributing Writer for Wake Up World

Monsanto shareholder Bill Gates has argued that GMOs are the solution to world hunger, going as far as to say that they are actually needed to fight worldwide starvation. Unfortunately for Gates, who back in 2010 bought 500,000 shares of the company he is now promoting in mainstream media as the solution to the world’s problems, a team of 900 scientists have found that GMO crops are actually not effective at fighting world hunger. In fact, the massive team found that Monsanto’s seeds, which have lead to thousands of farmer suicides due to excessive costs and failure to yield crops, were outperformed by traditional “agro-ecological” farming practices.

Funded by the World Bank and United Nations, an organization was created known as the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD). Consisting of 900 scientists and researchers, they set out to examine the complex issue of world hunger. While the issue of world hunger may be quite complex, their results were not. Quite plainly, the group found that genetically modified crops were not a meaningful solution to the problem. In other words, the expert team showed through rigorous analysis and repeated study that the claims made by Bill Gates are completely inaccurate.

Perhaps what is most compelling, though, is the fact thatBill Gates was fully aware of these findings before going on air to inform the public that GMOs are the solution to world hunger. The same GMOs that have beenlinked to organ damagemutated insects, and a host of other issues.

Bill Gates Knew of These Findings Beforehand

The findings of the IAASTD regarding the ineffectiveness of GMO crops were published on April 15, 2008. That is long before Bill Gates’ address to the public in late January of this year. Did Monsanto stockholder Gates ignore this information, or does he believe the 900 scientists to be incorrect? Perhaps the evidence generated from the expert team is not enough. In that case, then Gates should look no farther than the Union of Concerned Scientists.

Another massive research organization, the Union of Concerned Scientists also examined the true yield of GMO crops, only to find that the altered crops do not produce increased yields over the long run — despite their excessive cost and extreme danger to health and environment. The lack of scientific support behind the GMO crops was so startling to the Union that they documented all the details in a 2009 report entitled ”Failure to Yield.”

GMO crops are not only ineffective at fighting world hunger, but are a genuine threat to public health. Even if they were effective at feeding more individuals than traditional farming practices, would they really want to consume it? Bill Gates appears to have the interests of massive corporations in mind when perpetuating the myth that GMOs are the answer to fighting starvation.

About the Author

Anthony Gucciardi is an accomplished investigative journalist with a passion for natural health. Anthony’s articles have been featured on top alternative news websites such as Infowars, NaturalNews, Rense, and many others. Anthony is the co-founder of Natural Society, a website dedicated to sharing life-saving natural health techniques. Stay in touch with Natural Society via the following sites Facebook – Twitter – Web


http://wakeup-world.com/2012/03/04/sorry-bill-gates-gmo-crops-proven-to-be-ineffective-at-fighting-world-hunger/

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