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Will Europe give in to genetically modified foods?
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: July 03, 2008 02:17PM

Thus far, Europe has never had a friendly attitude towards genetically
modified (GM) foods.
In contrast to the United States, most European governments have
adopted the ?precautionary principle? in dealing with this new
technology, arguing that GM crops should be proven safe to both human
health and the environment before farmers plant their fields with them.
But as concerns about the world food supply grow, at least one nation is
reconsidering that stance.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is expected to attend a European
Union summit today, where he will urge the assembly to consider the
potential benefits of genetically engineered crops. Britain?s
environment minister says, ?There is a growing question of whether GM
crops can help the developing world out of the current food price
crisis. It is a question that we as a nation need to ask ourselves? Many
people concerned about poverty in the developing world and the
environment are wrestling with this issue,? he said [BBC News].

The biotech companies that create the genetically engineered plants have
long held out the promise that their products could increase crop
yields, require less water, and reduce the need for pesticides, among
other benefits. Boosters point to inventions like ?golden rice,? a
genetically engineered rice plant that naturally produces beta-carotene,
which could prevent vitamin A deficiencies in developing countries.

But such examples have done little to sway public opinion in Europe. In
2004, after a heated public debate, the [British] Government decided
there was no scientific case for a blanket ban on GM crops. But amid
fears over so-called ?Frankenstein foods?, it decided that commercial
production would be allowed on a case-by-case basis, only if evidence
showed it would not pose a risk to human health or the environment.
There are no GM crops being grown in Britain and only one trial is
taking place ? of GM potatoes in Cambridgeshire [The Independent].

Even if European Union officials decide to ease restrictions,
agricultural researchers say they don?t yet know how much the modified
crops could help the developing world, where food shortages and
escalating prices have led to scattered riots. Agriculture experts at
the UN and in developing countries do not expect GM crops on their own
to radically improve yields, but nor are they ready to write them off
when they can offer resistance to drought and pests. The main trouble,
they argue, is that almost all the research has been devoted to
developing crops for rich countries in the northern hemisphere.
www.checkbiotech.org



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