Showing posts with label farmers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farmers. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

MODIFIED CROPS REAP LAWSUITS, PETITIONS FROM VARIETY OF FOES

Farmers from Saskatchewan and South Dakota, Mississippi and Massachusetts lined the walls of a packed federal courtroom in Manhattan recently, as their lawyers told a judge that they were no longer able to keep genetically modified crops from their fields.
The hearing is part of a debate that is coming to life around the country, in courtrooms and Occupy sites, in boardrooms and online, with new petitions, ballot initiatives and lawsuits from California to Maine.
Last year, according to the Department of Agriculture, about 90 percent of all soybeans, corn, canola and sugar beets raised in the United States were grown from what scientists now call transgenic seed.
Most processed foods (staples like breakfast cereal, granola bars, chicken nuggets and salad dressing) contain one or more transgenic ingredients, according to estimates from the Grocery Manufacturers Association, although the labels don’t reveal that. (Some, like tortilla chips, can contain dozens.)
Common ingredients like corn, vegetable oil, maltodextrin, soy protein, lecithin, monosodium glutamate, cornstarch, yeast extract, sugar and corn syrup are almost always produced from transgenic crops.

Health risks unknown

No known health risks are associated with eating transgenic foods (although many scientists say it is too soon to assess the effects), and the Food and Drug Administration classifies them as safe.
But consumer resistance to transgenic food remains high. In a nationwide telephone poll conducted in October 2010 by Thomson Reuters and National Public Radio, 93 percent said if a food has been genetically engineered or has genetically engineered ingredients, it should say so on its label — a number that has been consistent since genetically modified crops were introduced. FDA guidelines say that food that contains genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, does not have to say so and can still be labeled “all natural.”
In California, voters in November will decide on a ballot initiative requiring the labeling of such foods.
In October, an online campaign called Just Label It began collecting signatures and comments on a petition to the FDA, requesting rules similar to those in the European Union, Japan, China, India and Australia, stating what transgenic food is in the package.

Problem of pollen drift

In traditional plant breeding, plants are bred with related organisms to encourage certain naturally occurring traits. In transgenic breeding, genetic material from unrelated organisms can be introduced to create new traits, like resistance to drought, herbicides or pests.
For the most part, the spread of transgenic seeds into the U.S. food supply has been purposeful, carried out by farmers and scientists who see enormous advantages in hardier plants.
For many in the food industry, including big players like Whole Foods, the dairy collective Organic Valley and Stonyfield Farm, the inevitability of transgenic food was cemented last year, when the Agriculture Department deregulated a new alfalfa created by Monsanto, the largest producer of genetically modified seed in the United States, despite furious lobbying by the organic industry.
Alfalfa, which has a strong tendency to drift from one field to another, is grown as feed for millions of dairy cows, making it one of the country’s largest crops. Transgenic alfalfa cannot be used to feed cows that produce organic milk. 

Farmers voice their GM wheat concerns

TWO Canadian farmers arrived in Merredin on Sunday afternoon to speak at a public meeting and share their experiences with genetically modified (GM) crops. Grains and livestock farmer Peter Eggers from Alberta and wheat farmer Matt Gehl from Saskatchewan are from the Canadian National Farmers Union (NFU) and explained to the local community why Canada rejected GM wheat in 2002 and shared their concerns about the future for wheat farmers in Australia.
Mr Eggers is one of 83 plaintiffs currently challenging the validity of agricultural technology company Monsanto’s seed patents in a US court.
He explained that many farmers in Canada were trying to protect themselves from being accused of patent infringement should they ever become contaminated by Monsanto’s GM seed.
He was an early adopter of GM canola but was later investigated by Monsanto for patent breaches after he decided to stop growing GM canola.
In regards to wheat, Monsanto plans to introduce GM wheat varieties but Mr Eggers said 82 per cent of the international customers said they didn’t want GM wheat.
He said it would destroy the wheat market if they were to go ahead with supplying GM wheat that had no demand.
Mr Gehl is a young fourth generation wheat farmer and is seriously concerned about the ability of his generation of farmers to have a voice in the future of agriculture.
He talked about the voice of farmers being marginalised as a consequence of increasing corporate control over agricultural research and policy.
Mr Gehl said Monsanto and other corporate companies were taking control over the whole food supply, not only of the seeds but the genes as well by using patents and courts to enforce their control by keeping the industry privatised.
Cunderdin wheat and canola farmer Ian James and Julie Newman from the Network of Concerned Farmers also discussed their concerns for GM crops in Australia.
Mr James discussed his concerns of GM crops when he found GM contamination on his farm last year.
He said GM canola from his neighbouring farm contaminated his paddock after storms and heavy rainfalls which were proof that segregation or co-existence of GM and non-GM crops was not possible.
In WA, GM wheat is an increasingly contentious issue and with GM crop trials in Merredin, the issue is very close to home.
Data shows that despite 80 per cent of overseas markets rejecting GM wheat, Australia is on the fast track to becoming the first country globally to commercialise GM wheat.
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Thursday, February 16, 2012

Willie Nelson and 300,000 Other Activists Sue Monsanto

Little did Willie Nelson know when he recorded "Crazy" years ago just how crazy it would become for our cherished family farmers in America. Nelson, President of Farm Aid, has recently called for the national Occupy movement to declare an "Occupy the Food System" action.  Nelson states, "Corporate control of our food system has led to the loss of millions of family farmers, destruction of our soil…

Nelson states, "Corporate control of our food system has led to the loss of millions of family farmers, destruction of our soil…"

Hundreds of citizens, (even including NYC chefs in their white chef hats) joined Occupy the Food System groups, ie Food Democracy Now, gathered outside the Federal Courts in Manhattan on January 31st, to support organic family farmers in their landmark lawsuit against Big Agribusiness giant Monsanto. (Organic Seed Growers & Trade Association v. Monsanto) Oral arguments were heard that day concerning the lawsuit by 83 plaintiffs representing over 300,000 organic farmers, organic seed growers, and organic seed businesses.

The lawsuit addresses the bizarre and shocking issue of Monsanto harassing and threatening organic farmers with lawsuits of "patent infringement" if any organic farmer ends up with any trace amount of GM seeds on their organic farmland.

Judge Naomi Buckwald heard the oral arguments on Monsanto’s Motion to Dismiss, and the legal team from Public Patent Foundation represented the rights of American organic farmers against Monsanto, maker of GM seeds, [and additionally, Agent Orange, dioxin, etc.]
After hearing the arguments, Judge Buckwald stated that on March 31st she will hand down her decision on whether the lawsuit will move forward to trial.