EU Hopes to Level "Major Blow" to Genetically Modified Crops
By Codie Leonsch Hartwig, published Oct 28, 2007
Published Content: 173 Total Views: 72,495 Favorited By: 29 CPs
Adrian Bebb, Friends of the Earth Europe's GMO (genetically modified organism) campaigner, said that this EU proposal constitutes a "major blow" to the GMO industry. He added: "For the first time there is a European Commission proposal that GM crops should not be approved in Europe - and crucially this relates to two maize varieties for commercial growing." He also explained that the EU Commission "has raised serious concerns about the environmental impact of growing these crops."
The corns--or maize--that the EU Commission is proposing should be classified as unsuitable for cultivation in EU countries are two varieties that have a shared characteristic. The two corns, Syngenta's Bt11 and Pioneer/Dow's 1507, are genetically modified to produce a toxin that aims at certain crop-damaging insects. The toxin is called Bt.
Recent reliable scientific studies have clearly shown that there is a potential for great environmental harm if these two Bt-corns are cultivated in EU countries. Research shows that while Bt-toxin corn is poisonous to crop-harming insects, it is also poisonous to butterfly species and crop-beneficial insects inclusively.
Research further shows that Bt-toxic corns produce long term harmful effects on soil health. Without healthy soil, the ecosystem cycles like the hydro cycle, the detritus cycle and the nitrogen cycle are interfered with and begin to compound the environmentally harmful effects.
Further research shows that earlier studies underestimated the risks of GM corn and that the risks and effects are not at all predictable. This new emphasis on greater risk and unpredictability highlights the shortcomings of current EU risk assessment procedures and their current ability to independently evaluate risk.
EU Hopes to Level "Major Blow" to Genetically Modified Crops
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USA
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Tamara Hardison
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Posted on 10/29/2007 at 9:10:00 AM
DrDevience
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Posted on 10/29/2007 at 3:10:00 AM