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The
Independent (UK)
26
May 2002
GM
threat to organic farming
By Geoffrey Lean
Environment Editor
Organic
farming will be forced out of production in Britain and across Europe if GM
crops are grown commercially, a startling new EU report concludes.
The report which is so controversial that top EC officials tried to stop
it being made public shows that organic farms will become so contaminated
by genes from the new crops that they can no longer be licensed or will have
to spend so much money trying to protect themselves that they will become uneconomic.
Conventional non-GM farms will also be seriously affected.
Drawn up as a result of two years of studies in Britain, France, Italy and Germany,
it provides the most damning confirmation to date of the arguments, long advanced
by environmentalists, that it is not possible for GM and organic farming to
co-exist and that, as a result, shoppers will be denied a choice of what to
buy.
The conclusion is politically explosive because the demand for organic produce
is increasing rapidly across Europe, while consumer resistance to GM food has
forced supermarkets not to stock it.
The Director General of the EC's Joint Research Centre, which produced the report,
submitted it with a letter saying: "In view of the sensitivity of the issue,
I would suggest that the report be kept for internal use within the Commission
only."
Publication of the findings is embarrassing for the Government. On Friday the
Prime Minister denounced GM opponents as using "emotion to drive out reason".
The report which follows a study by the European Environment Agency warning
that genes from GM crops will travel long distances, creating superweeds
studies the effects of growing modified maize, potatoes and oilseed rape commercially
on several types of farms.
It found that even if only a tenth of a country or region was planted with them
far less that the 54 per cent of Canada now under GM crops keeping
contamination at a level that would allow organic farming to continue would
be "extremely difficult for any farm-crop combination in the scenarios
considered". It adds that when contamination occurred every year through
"the wide-ranging cultivation of GM crops" in an area "organic
farms will lose their organic status and face severe problems to grow their
crops according to the regulations given by the EU".
GM farmers would also be at risk, it added, because organic farmers might well
be entitled to compensation.
Yesterday, Adrian Bebb, food campaigner of Friends of the Earth, said: "This
report shows that if GM crops are grown in Britain farming will be plunged into
even greater crisis and consumers will be denied their fundamental right to
choose what they and their children will eat."
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