Modified Corn Seeds Sow Doubts
Next spring, farmers in Canada will be able to sow one of the most complicated genetically engineered plants ever designed, a futuristic type of corn containing eight foreign genes.
With so much crammed into one seed, the modified corn will be able
to confer multiple benefits, such as resistance to corn borers and
rootworms, two caterpillar-like pests that infest the valuable grain
crop, as well as withstanding applications of glyphosate, a weed killer
better known by its commercial name, Roundup.
But a controversy has arisen over the new seeds, which were approved for use last month by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency: Health Canada hasn't assessed their safety.
The health agency said in response to questions from The Globe and Mail that it didn't have to do so, because it is relying on the two companies making the seeds, agriculture giants Monsanto Co. and Dow AgroSciences LLC, to flag any safety concerns. But the companies haven't tested the seeds either, because they say they aren't required to.
The companies have checked the safety of each of the eight genes one at a time in individual corn plants, but haven't done so when they combined the foreign matter together in one seed, says Trish Jordan, a spokesperson for Monsanto Canada Inc.
"Every single one of the traits has been tested singly, and it has gone through the complete rigorous regulatory review process," Ms. Jordan said.
When the eight traits were subsequently combined into one seed through conventional breeding techniques, there was no trigger for an additional safety assessment, she said.
But the companies', and Health Canada's, position is disputed by opponents of genetically modified foods and consumer safety advocates, who say guidelines from the UN's food standards commission, Codex Alimentarius, recommend such testing, even when the novel traits are introduced through normal plant breeding.
Michael Hansen, senior scientist at Consumers Union, a U.S. advocacy group, says he's worried that combining a large number of foreign genes could lead to the creation of allergens or other deleterious substances in food that don't occur when only one gene is involved.
The government's decision to leave the safety testing to the companies is like "putting the fox in charge of the hen house," Mr. Hansen said.
Health Canada "has entirely abdicated its responsibility" for food safety, echoed Lucy Sharratt, co-ordinator of the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network, an Ottawa-based group that is critical of genetic engineering.
In its statement to The Globe, Health Canada said it approved the new corn because it didn't find anything untoward in testing conducted from 2002 to 2008 that looked at the safety of the genes two at a time.
"According to Health Canada's policy, when a company chooses to breed or cross approved genetically modified plants with other approved GM or non-GM plants, the company must inform Health Canada only if there is a change in the safety of the product," the federal agency said. "If there was a change, the company would have to provide the necessary information to Health Canada."
The issue of the safety of the new corn has wide-ranging importance because multiple foreign genes in seeds is the wave of the future in biotechnology. When genetic modification of plants began, breeders would introduce only one gene taken from a foreign source, such as a bacterium, at a time. Corn seeds now on the market have up to three foreign genes.
Ms. Jordan said the eight-gene corn, which the companies call SmartStax because numerous traits are stacked together, will be the basic platform for all Monsanto's future versions of the crop.
She said researchers are looking to add even more genes to it, including those for drought resistance, yield increases and more efficient use of nitrogen, an important plant nutrient.
The new corn isn't the sweet type eaten on the cob but is typically used for animal feed. Monsanto expects about 200,000 acres to be planted next year in Canada, mainly in Ontario, and that the crop will have enhanced yields.
Under the UN Codex guidelines, producers of genetically engineered plants, even when the producers subsequently use conventional breeding on their seeds, should provide information "to reduce the possibility that a food derived from a recombinant-DNA plant would have an unexpected, adverse effect on human health."
Health Canada says the view that further testing needs to be done on such seeds is "erroneous" because the Codex guideline doesn't explicitly mention the stacking of genetic traits as a trigger for such a review.
Mr. Hansen believes Health Canada's interpretation leaves the country open to possible trade disputes because other jurisdictions, such as Europe, could challenge the Canadian corn by citing a failure to follow the Codex guidelines.
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39 Comments so far
Show AllOne of the reasons why the likes of Monsanto get away with their lies and deceptions is that most journalists who write about the subject of genetic engineering don’t really know what they are talking about. They just churn out the corporate PR and add a few words from “concerned consumer advocates” or environmental groups that warn about the dangers of transgenic food (this is called “balanced reporting”). The reader is then supposed to figure out who is right and who is wrong.
Here is an example from the article above:
“The companies have CHECKED THE SAFETY OF EACH of the eight genes one at a time in individual corn plants, but haven't done so when they combined the foreign matter together in one seed” ...... “Health Canada didn't find anything untoward in testing conducted from 2002 to 2008 that looked at the safety of the genes two at a time. ..”
This shows that the writer has no clue about the farce that passes as “safety testing” in the approval of transgenic food (or animal fodder). The obscure and unscientific basis for the “safety” assessment is an absurd principle called “SUBSTANTIAL EQUIVALENCE (SE)”: If the transgenic organism (here plant) appears to be similiar to its natural counterpart (regarding a small set of characteristics SELECTED BY THE MANUFACTURER e.g. amount of protein, minerals, vitamins, etc.) it is then assumed to be “safe” (no health risk). This is in essence the “rigorous regulatory review process” the Monsanto spokeswoman was referring to: Talk about keeping the public in the dark ...
The concept of SE (the brainchild of the Biotech industry’s lawyers) was adopted to turn the “approval procedure” into a joke and enable the rapid spread of transgenic crops (in the US it worked extremely well– the much better informed Europeans (including farmers) are fighting GMOs tooth and nail and the rest of the (mostly developing) world simply wasn’t consulted...
( http://www.i-sis.org.uk/EuropesUprisingAgainstGMOs.php )
The question was (and still is): How can you accurately assess the risk of transgenic crops? What exactly needs to be “measured” and for how long? Does the insertion of foreign genes lead to the expression of novel proteins? And if so, how will this effect our health (immunesystem)? Can we take up foreign genes (and their viral promoters) by eating transgenic food? Extensive feeding trials, complex toxicological, immunological testing and long time monitoring for delayed effects would be necessary to answer these questions. This would not only cost a ton of money but also delay market approval for many years or prevent it altogether.
“DUAL USE” new defined: Transgenic food had to be somehow “novel” because otherwise it would not be possible to get a patent on it but at the same time it needed to be kind of “normal” to avoid costly and rigorous safety testing and ensure “regulatory relief”.
So the biotech industry had to come up with a plan to ensure a “fast-track” (almost guaranteed) approval to reassure consumers: As long as the chemical composition of the novel food is not grossly different from non GE-food NO SAFETY OF TOXICOLOGY TESTS ARE REQUIRED. The problem is, that information about the chemical composition is not good enough to predict toxicological risk or other biochemical effects.
The whole approval process (devised in the US) is a scam and US citizens have been the first guinea pigs for the biotech industry. Here in Europe the industry argues that “Americans have eaten transgenic crops for years and nothing happened” which is an absurd claim since GE-food is not labelled in the US so any health problems could not be traced to its consumption..)
Like the nuclear industry the biotech monster could only become so big because it undermined major democratic and scientific principles like transparency, accountability, precaution and informed consent. And before the public really understands how they have been robbed of their democratic rights (you can vote, but we decide....) the next huge assault on nature and our health has already started: nanotechnology....
In a report from the Canadian Royal Society about the risk assessment of transgenic food
http://www.agbios.com/docroot/articles/2001035-A.pdf
the Scientific Panel recommends (selected examples)
- that the design and execution of all testing regimes of new transgenic organisms should be conducted in OPEN CONSULTATION with the expert scientific community.
- that analysis of the outcomes of all tests on new transgenic organisms should be monitored by an appropriately configured panel of “arms-length” experts from all sectors, who report their decisions and rationale IN A PUBLIC FORUM
- the precautionary regulatory assumption that, in general, new technologies should NOT BE PRESMED SAFE unless there is a RELIABLE SCIENTIFIC BASE for considering them safe. The Panel rejects the use of “substantial equivalence” as a decision threshold to exempt new GM products from rigorous safety assessments on the basis of superficial similarities because such a regulatory procedure is not a precautionary assignment of the burden of proof.
- that the primary burden of proof be upon those who would deploy food biotechnology products to carry out the full range of tests necessary to demonstrate reliably that they do not pose unacceptable risks.
- that Canadian regulatory agencies and officials exercise GREAT CARE to maintain an OBJECTIVE AND NEUTRAL STANCE with respect to the public debate about the risks and benefits of biotechnology in their public statements and interpretations of the regulatory process.
- that companies applying for permission to release a GM organism into the environment should be required to provide experimental data (using ecologically meaningful experimental protocols) on all aspects of potential environmental impact.
The whole idea of “genetic engineering” is base on a huge fallacy: Genes are NOT INDEPENDENT carriers of information that can be cut out and inserted into a foreign genome because they will always execute their “program” as desired - this is complete nonsense and the result of a mechanistic view of nature (from the 19th century)....Genes interact with the whole cell and the environment...
More information:
http://www.greenpeace.org.br/transgenicos/pdf/beyond_substantial_equivalence.pdf
http://www.psrast.org/intro1.htm
http://video.google.de/videosearch?q=genetic+engineering&emb=0#q=genetic+engineering&emb=0&start=20
tocqueville, an excellent, thoughtful discussion of this issue. I'm impressed.
Not testing for the effect of stacked genes because they weren't doing that when the testing criteria was devised is insane. But corporations unleashed are psychopathic entities anyway. So we're being ruled by psychopaths. Lucky us. Well, look at how we've treated others. Native Americans, Filipinos, all the banana republics, Vietnamese, Iraqis. The list is endless. So now our GMO chickens are coming home to roost. Serves us right. That old saying what goes around comes around is something to think about. And each of us, no matter how much we have objected to our country's behavior, has benefited from it. I have read about a very few people who have truly opted out. No car, no job, leaving almost no footprint. But how many of us can claim to have done that? I can't. I too am culpable.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
I think a good number of us might be forced to join soon if the domestic fascists have their way.
I remember from watching the Future of Food that when scientists first figured out how to transplant genes in the 1970s, the consensus was to not rush into industrial applications until research had advanced to the level needed to ensure safety. I'm guessing industry used its money to rush the process and twist the consensus.
Fact is, we still don't know. The human genome is 25,000 genes; scientists think this is too small to fully encapsulate known human features, yet most of our DNA don't code for protein products. A lot of these form structures made of RNA or regulate DNA transcription. Certain human DNA genes can code for multiple products. In sections originally considered evolutionary genetic junk, DNA is still transcribed. And discoveries are still being made. Considering all the complexity that we do know about DNA and all we don't know about the human genome (which is fairly well studied), we're in no good position to be making chimeras with other genomes.
As for nanotech, there's already concern that the size of the particles, based on what science knows about abestos and beryllium poisoning, may result in similar lung damage.
Relying on the very chemical companies that are contributing to the devastation of our environment???? Are they crazy? Wonder how much was paid 'under the table' for this.
There are some really great corn varieties out there, traditional Native American varieties from up and down the two continents. They are avilable to you. Plant some. They are far more nutritious than Monosonto's frankencorn and sustainable.
Them guys are going to kill all of us with that junk, but I sure hope before they do it they come up with a Viagra-augmented franken pop corn, so I can improve my sex life and watch a movie at the same time.
<<..it didn't have to do so,(test the corn) because it is relying on the two companies making the seeds, agriculture giants Monsanto Co. and Dow AgroSciences LLC, to flag any safety concerns. But the companies haven't tested the seeds either, because they say they aren't required to.>>
What could possibly go wrong?
Sounds like Health Canada is as alert and comprehensive as are our American agencies. Good Luck to us ALL!
good comments.....everybody see the docu movie on Pollan's and Schlosser's books?,,,,called "Food, Inc." But the books are where ya gotta go.
Having failed to teach ourselves and our children about THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE, we are doomed to make errors which will probably be magnitudes of grossness greater than what we now imagine. oh well. This is not something we can blame on individual humans or corporations, but rather a result of OUR educational framework, and OUR attitudes about science and technology ...(two VERY different things, kids). For centuries we have talked ourselves into believing that we "understand" parts of nature, and that such understanding gives us the right to be allowed to use greater and greater technology in any way imaginable without any oversight or discussion by impartial third parties.......
When we begin to directly receive adverse feedback from this madness we will have a collective epiphany and change course.....my hope is that not all of the biosphere will be obliterated when this inevitable feedback finally comes back to rectify our silly failure to maintain checks on the unlimited technological mayhem we have been unleashing for over two centuries......
Anytime you attempt to isolate anything from the whole you are asking for imbalance. In fact there is no need to ask, isolation, will cause subtle and gross chaos,either now or later. Genetically altered foods are created in isolation of the entirety of nature while naturally occurring foods are a product of and intimately connected to the wholeness of nature. These foods have the full support of natural intelligence and creativity. Frankenfood is in complete conflict with it's surroundings and receives no support from natural intelligence. Isolation, separateness and exclusion invite and incite imbalance. What to do ? The only thing these idiots understand is $$$ . Forget about trying to convince the likes of monsanto on the basis of natural purity. their arrogance is impenetrable. crush them into oblivion with your closed pocket book.
Former Congressman Toby Mofett who has been attacking
Ralph Nader works for Monsanto. How much to they pay him for
this Financial doublcross?
A large part of the answer to such things must lie in never purchasing the products when one is provided with a choice.
A problem, of course, is that these things come unlabeled.
I am thinking that rather than attempt to navigate the grand commercial world of false storefronts and interlacing capital, I would like to find a handful of reliable green concerns, and purchase from no one else or almost no one else.
Can anyone amplify or refine these suggestions & offer specs or central hubs of related info?
-- Financing from credit unions
-- Food from coops & local growers
-- Clothes and shoes of local union manufacture
-- Housing cooperative if available, owned if not & possible
-- Water filtered, not bottled
-- No private insurance, at least where legal
Legalities are a frequent problem.
I need suggestions for information and connectivity and for medical care. Certainly news not supported by ads is a good principle, but these things.
bardamu,
Jeffrey Smith, who wrote SEEDS OF DECEPTION, basiclly says that since you can't be sure what is or is not GM food, stay away from SOY, CORN, COTTON SEED and CANOLA, as well as their derivatives. He has a couple of interviews on Video Google, the one I'd recommend first is "The Real Reason You Want to Avoid Genetically Modified Foods".... about an hour long.
Always buy fresh food from local growers when you can, organic or not....
as for "medical care", can't suggest anything, but you may be interested in LEF.org (Life Extension Foundation), and IF you're a "critical" reader, NaturalNews.com for "alternative" health news...
I do recommend OrganicConsumers.org for information as to keeping up with organic issues and finding local 'green' stores. They have better participation in some area over others, but it's a start.
peace...
"It is indigestable (sic) in its natural form." You need to chew it. Slow down and enjoy your food. And do not think about Monsanto while eating. It causes indigestion.
This variety of corn, SmartStax, was not only rushed through the Canadian system, but the US EPA has also approved it. This comes on the heals of a report this past spring of three varieties of Monsanto GM corn failing to develop kernels on the ears in Africa this past harvest season.
I agree with another poster who pointed out the mention of Codex Alimtarius. Most people have not taken the time to actually learn anything about this and believe that it is JUST a new method of labeling our products. This code could eventually remove all our abilities to determine what we put into our bodies by dening the ability to label products as "organic" or "no bgh"...
As for Health Canada abdicating it's responsibility, not the first time from what I've seen. Watch the movie "Run From the Cure", as to a 'cure' for cancer. With that many testimonials, one would think that there should be some formal testing.
Nobody that I know would ever trust someone like Conagra or Monsanto to have anything but the bottom line in mind. It is certainly not good food.
I no longer eat corn at all. It is indigestable in its natural form. The Hopis, Navajos and Mexican natives all ground it into a meal with which to make real food. I do eat corn tortillas, and I am hopeful that since they are "all Natural" and/or organic that they do not have any of the poisons in them.
Companies like Monsanto and Conagra shuld be disbanded and their coporate officers sent to jail for the rest of their lives and made to eat the poison they have foisted off on the mostly stupid people.
I agree. "Do onto others...." Put them and their families into cages and feed them only food that has been genetically modified...oops, growing an extra arm? oops nutritionally depleted? oops, oops, oops.......
That's what you get when you elect a conservative government.
Jeevee
WHY ARE HUMANS SO ANXIOUS TO DESTROY THIS BEAUTIFUL AND INVALUABLE PLANET???
i'm not quite sure monsanto is human
"Im not quite sure monsanto is human" Then let me erase all of your doubt, they are NOT.
I had a dream where Monsanto executives were strung up on wooden crosses as scarecrows while a flock of ravens croaked "greed, famine, war" and pecked at their faces.
Strange dream; too bad dreams never come true.
The genetic bottleneck that GM crops represent is a perfect breeding ground for crop destroying, virus, fungus, bacteria and insects. Already there are bt resistent bugs (Helicoverpa zea) emerging and roundup-ready weeds.
A few years of profits for how many who will die in the inevitable famine that will follow?
Bug and weed resistance always inevitably occur. Insecticide 'refuge acres' and the occasional use of different weed killers prolong the 'value' of pesticides. We have or will soon have crops with resistance to multiple herbicide types. I see no problems in the foreseeable future in the ability to kill weeds. Insects are somewhat trickier. For those of you who are too fearful to eat gm or non-organic food, there are ways to cope. For instance, I still have a small hand grain grinder that I used to use to grind my own corn for tortillas (and they tasted just as yummy as the gm ones do).
Genetic variability provides some protection against attack by microorganisms. These GM crop varieties will have very little genetic variation. Once some virus, fungus or bacteria develops the ability to successfully attack one plant they can attack them all. Crop diseases can literally spread with the speed of the wind and destroy vast areas in a single season.
It's a recipe for famine. The Irish potato famine was one example of just such a genetic bottleneck.
GM crops are nothing more than our corporate overlords attempting to control the food supply and further enslave us. There is ample evidence that GM crops do NOT deliver better yields than open seeded varieties and that the corporations LIE ABOUT PROMISED YIELDS.
Who you gonna believe: the corporate shills or your own lying eyes?
For corn farmers the classic disease that "can literally spread with the speed of the wind" was the 1970 corn leaf blight. Seed corn developers have worked hard since that time to develop resistance against most likely potential problems. So far, so good. With corn, gm varieties generally yield a bit better than conventional hybrids, and hugely better than old, open-pollinated types.
Monsanto executives and their families should be required to eat this frankencorn for breakfast, lunch and dinner everyday for a year.
Let's see what kind of mutations they experience at the end of the year.
For the truly outrageous, complete story regarding the history and ultimate goals of these "folks" please read
William Engdahl's "Seeds of Destruction".....Surprise, surprise, it's not about some altruistic wish to feed the hungry people of the planet.....it is about the money and power....."control the food supply and you control the people"...Henry Kissinger.
x
We can't cure stupid! However, we do not have to eat these GMO varieties ourselves. Stick with the heirloom corns. They are easy to grow, healthy, and the seeds can be replanted next year. Corporations own America today but they do not own Americans. We are free to choose what we consume. Your vote seems worthless today but your dollars are still powerful. Stop consuming corporate products and foods. The slow economy is growing and there is nothing the national corporations can do about it. We will eventually replace them through local production and consumption. Change starts at the bottom.
Agreed, however, remember that GM corn is not designed for DIRECT human consumption
but secondarily through the meat you eat. And corn, being the ubiquitious element in a vast number of food products with no lable requirments to indicate the presense of GMO being present, is damn hard to avoid. Yes, grow your own, but you will want to avoid "Miracle grow", Scott's, and Ortho, as they are Monsanto subsidiaries. Get your Heirloom seeds while you still can. GM is metastasizing across the country, and around the globe.
Bastards!
Good point cpaddock,
The successful strategy for me has been to move in with tropical peasants who personally-pick everything (much of it off 100 year old trees.) I felt as though I was reborn as soon as I shunned everything with a plastic package surrounding it. Cans are bad too since they are lined with a layer of plastic polymer.
I quit getting sick all the time.
My hair and nails started growing thicker and stronger.
I started sleeping better.
My memory seemed to improve and I could concentrate better.
But I also quit buying BiG PhaRma's toothpaste and deodorant which is chalk full of nano-particles and bovine fat (BGH) that you're immune system can't get rid of. Switching to baking soda for toothpaste and limes under the arms is the way to go.
I haven't' eaten beef for about five years. My moves are smooth baby smooth!
Try it. It will make you Healthy, Wealthy and Wise!
TJ
(unfortuneately, I am still addicted to pop corn which is locally grown; I know not the source of the seed stock.)
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
With the coming of peak oil (it is back to the range of $70) it will make it more difficult to keep farming with fossil fuels. The average is about 10 calories of fossil fuel for every one calorie of food produced. GM corn may simply viable for agriculture in the long run, so it may become a moot seed.
My feeling is that the genetic modification of significance occurred long before this in pushing the carbohydrate content of the corn at the expense of protein. Planting corn the way native people did (companion planting) and using their seed as far as possible will likely win out in the long run. Maya, Aztec and Hopi were very good at sustaining a productive agriculture. I would make friends with them if possible.
You're assuming GM corn, because it produces poisons, can avoid the need for more oil derivative pesticides and herbicides. Current results from GM farmers have shown this isn't the case; resistant insects and plants still chew up the crop, while yields have often decreased. Not only that, making new biotech products is still probably more costly than making new pesticides, and these crops will need to be updated against resistant "pests", just like flu vaccines.
The more genes they add, the more chances of unintended consequences, the less likely GM crops succeed in doing what they are designed to do, while soils and ecosystems are further degraded by monoculture.
I recently read that even research scientists in the field are wanting non-industry sponsored research because there's no objective way to verify claims if 90% of all biotech research is company funded.
The citing of Codex Alimetarius in this article is disturbing as well. The UN codex has a dark history and only serves to hasten corporate domination of the human food supply. I trust it about as much as I trust Monsanto. I just wonder what will happen when the Frankenfoods fight back?
I'm worried about the mention of Codex Alimetarius too. In that Codex it is stated that only drugs may be said to prevent, cure or treat any disease. Big Pharma is out to get vitamins and dietary supplements. They can't patent vitamins and they don't want us to know that most of our chronic diseases are due to a lack of vitamins and minerals. Oh no!! you gotta get some pharmecuedicals for that condition. The British navy never should have made the men eat those limes!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Attack_of_the_Killer_Tomatoes
:-)
LOL.. Touche'
Why is it that no one requires the top twenty officials and the largest stockholders to eat these foods and feed them to their families for a year before allowing them on the market? Are all agencies gutless?
MichaelC
sorry MichaelC, i didn't see your comment and ended posting one almost exactly like it. we are of like minds.
Relying on Monsanto to verify the safety of its products is like relying on Wall Street to investigate itself for fraud.
GMOs: a dishonest and dangerous answer to a question nobody asked.