It's a lawless land
when it comes to containing GM
(But even legalese can't contain promiscuous plants and wily
wildlife)
By Tobin Hack
PLENTY Magazine
September 2008
You’ve seen them lingering in the aisles of your local
health food grocery store, deep in thought. Painstakingly conscientious
shoppers who can easily spend 20 minutes choosing the cereal that’s best for
the planet and for their bodies. No added sugars: check. Fiber content: check.
Organic: check. But when it comes to choosing products free of genetically
modified (GM) materials, what many shoppers don’t know is that the USDA isn’t
protecting consumers or organic farmers.
Like any seeds, GM or GE (genetically engineered)
seeds—ubiquitous in US food markets today—cannot be confined to the fields in
which they’re planted. Pollinating insects and lightweight seeds that blow on
the wind will always obey nature rather than man-made boundaries. Inevitable
human error—insufficiently cleaned trucks or grain elevators—will also always
lead to some amount of GM contamination. “It’s actually absolutely impossible
to contain genetically engineered crops,” says Craig Holdrege, author of Beyond
Biotechnology: The Barren Promise of Genetic Engineering, and director and
senior researcher for non-profit The Nature Institute. “There’s no way you can
do it.”
Even Monsanto—which makes 90% of GM seed, according to
Greenpeace—concedes that GMO escapes cannot be prevented absolutely. “I don’t
think you can absolutely prevent anything in life from escaping or coming
someplace else,” says Monsanto spokesperson Brad Mitchell.
But when GE materials sneak out of their crop perimeters,
they jeopardize both natural ecosystems and organic farmers’ livelihoods.
“We’ve got a situation where our federal agencies haven’t even really dealt
with this contamination issue, other than to suggest that it happens and it’s
an acceptable practice,” says Center for Food Safety director Joe Mendelson. “That’s just not good enough—that has
environmental impacts, it has economic consequences, and it has social
consequences on farmers who may lose their farm because they’re contaminated.”
When GMOs escape into the wild
there is a risk engineered traits will infiltrate more delicate natural species
through cross-breading, or even generate “superweeds”
resistant to herbicides. A study done by the Nature Institute, for example,
showed that creeping bentgrass—a USDA-approved
herbicide resistant grass engineered by Monsanto and Scotts Company for golf
courses—had spread its transgene via pollen to native
and related plants up to 13 miles beyond the control area perimeter.
But it’s not just other plants that are put in
danger—organic farmers also find themselves between a rock and a hard place
when GE materials go traveling. The USDA does not test organic crops for GM
contamination, and has never revoked a farmers’ organic certification as a
result of GM contamination, according to spokesperson Joan Shaffer. But organic
grain seed buyers—especially those that wish to export to European markets with
stricter GM regulations—do test for GM presence, making organic certification a
moot point. “USDA may say that an organic farmer who gets contaminated isn’t
going to lose his certification, but it’s disingenuous—the market’s going to
reject their product anyway, and they’re not going to get their organic
premium,” says Mendelson.
Once an organic farmer has been contaminated, he must either
move from the organic to the conventional market, or shoulder the full
financial burden of restoring his contaminated crop. In either case, he runs
the risk of being sued by Monsanto or another GM company, on grounds of patent
infringement. According to non-profit advocacy group Rural Vermont, Monsanto
has filed at least 90 lawsuits against farmers, in more than 20 states.
The GM industry is moving ahead at full speed nontheless. Every year, several hundred or even thousand
new GM products are approved by the USDA’s department of animal and plant
health inspection services (APHIS) for field trial under permit, says Dr.
Michael Wach, science and regulatory affairs managing
director of the Biotechnology Industry Organization. Seventy-five of those
today enjoy “deregulated status,” meaning that they and their progeny are
considered safe for the environment and can be grown without APHIS oversight.
And not a single GM product proposed by Monsanto has ever been rejected by the
USDA, according to Monsanto spokesperson Brad Mitchell.
Center for Food Safety’s Mendelson
says the way to regulate the field fairly is to require GM labeling, and to
place contamination liability on GM corporations like Monsanto, rather than on
organic farmers. “The burden should be on the industry to prove that they can’t
contaminate. The industry that puts these products out in the marketplace—with
the knowledge that it’s going to get out and have economic consequences on people
who don’t want to use it—should pay for the impact of that,” he says.
For proponents of stricter GMO regulation, recent legal
battles over GM alfalfa and sugar beets—the next two big crops expected to take
the GM market by storm—provide a glimmer of hope. Monsanto’s Roundup Ready
Alfalfa recently became the first GM product ever to have its deregulated
status revoked by USDA. Thanks to litigation against USDA by the Center for
Food Safety, Monsanto must reassess the environmental impact of the alfalfa.
Although farmers who had already planted the strain of
alfalfa have not been made to uproot their crops, further planting is suspended
until Monsanto has completed further study on the environmental impact of the
plant. “We’re confident that the alfalfa decision set a good legal precedent,”
says Mendelson.
Center for Food Safety is now litigating against USDA for
having granted deregulated status to GM sugar beets grown in the Willamette
Valley of Oregon. The valley is home to native relative species of the sugar
beet, such as swiss chard
and table beets, which are a source of seed for the rest of the country. If GM
sugar beets were to get into these related species, transgenic seeds could
quickly spread nationally.
Individual states are also making strides toward what many
non-GM farmers hope will be a more level playing field.
In her February 2006 testimony on Bill S 18, Annie Claghorn, an organic farmer in
In the meantime, shoppers concerned about the impacts of GM
products on their health and planet have little choice but to give organic
farmers and organic grain buyers their good faith, hoping the competitive
market provides sufficient protection and transparency.
plentymag.com