|
Arsenic, a natural element, became a widespread problem after
the "Green
Revolution" of the
1960s when the flooded
fields used for
intensive rice farming
brought arsenic to the
surface and concentrated
it there. The World
Health Organization
estimates that 112
million people in this
region have levels of
arsenic in their bodies
that can cause disease.
Hundreds of thousands in
each of India and
Bangladesh have cancer
attributed to arsenic,
making the crisis worse
than the toxic fumes
from Bhopal. Today it is
still dangerous to drink
from wells in some
regions of West Bengal
and Bangladesh.
The story says that a University of Georgia team has
engineered a new version
of a little-known plant
called arabidopsis to
remove the arsenic. The
plant sucks up
contaminated water from
the soil and binds the
element to its own
cells.
This leaves contaminated plants which must then be treated as
toxic waste, as arsenic
can't be destroyed. But
this is much easier than
trying to dispose of the
poisoned soil itself.
Arabidopsis, a relative
of mustard, was the
first plant whose full
set of genes, or genome,
was decoded.
THE LOOMING TRADE WAR
OVER PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY
Ronald Bailey is Reason
magazine's science
correspondent and an
adjunct scholar at the
Cato Institute.
http://www.freetrade.org/pubs/pas/tpa-018.pdf
Executive Summary
American farmers are
caught in the middle of
a battle between the
United States and the
European Union over
genetically modified
organisms (GMOs). The EU
is one of the most
important potential
markets for those crops,
two-thirds of which are
grown in the United
States, but impending EU
regulations on biotech
crops would seriously
disrupt the flow of
those crops to European
markets.
Plant biotechnology has dramatically boosted American
farmers' productivity
and lowered their costs
and, at the same time,
helped them to protect
the natural environment
by reducing their use of
agricultural chemicals
and preventing soil
erosion. Consumers have
also benefited from
lower prices and
a healthier environment.
In developing countries,
the deployment of plant
biotechnology can spell
the difference between
life and death and
between health and
disease for hundreds of
millions of the world's
poorest people.
One scientific panel after another has concluded that biotech
foods are safe to eat,
and so has the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
Even an EU review issued
in the fall of 2001 of
81 separate European
studies of GMOs found no
evidence that biotech
foods posed any new risk
to health of the
environment.
The EU has banned all
food containing GMOs on
the basis of the
"precautionary
principle," under
which regulators do not
need to show
scientifically that a
biotech crop in unsafe
before banning it; they
need
only show that it has
not been proved
harmless. Jettisoning
scientific risk
assessment and replacing
it with a precautionary
approach will open the
entire trading system to
interruptions based on
arbitrary
justifications.
Capricious labeling requirements will also proliferate. Such
labels are unjustifiably
stigmatizing and costly
and offer no consumer
health or safety
benefits.
Consequently, all U.S. negotiators involved with trade in
biotech crops must make
it unalterable U.S.
policy to oppose the
application of the
precautionary principle
and insist instead on
scientifically based
risk standards in all
international trade
forums. Complete
document available at http://www.freetrade.org/pubs/pas/tpa-018.pdf
NEW ORGANIC FOOD RULES
TO LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
Reuters
Deborah Cohen and
Jessica Wohl
CHICAGO/NEW YORK - U.S. consumers, long besieged and
sometimes bewildered by
food makers' claims
about
"organic"
products, are, according
to this story, about to
get a government seal of
approval on their
premium-priced
groceries.
The story says that companies ranging from giants like Kraft
Foods Inc. and General
Mills Inc. to
independents such as
Annie's Naturals and
Honest Tea expect the
new government labeling
requirements, which take
effect on Oct. 21, to
level the playing field
in the fastest-growing
segment of the food
industry.
Katherine DiMatteo, who heads the Greenfield,
Massachusetts-based
Organic Trade
Association, a group
representing U.S.
manufacturers and
growers, was quoted as
saying,
"Manufacturers felt
their natural-product
market was being
threatened by all types
of claims. There had to
be consumer confidence
in the label."
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is requiring food
companies to adopt
strict standards for
organic foods, ensuring
they are produced free
of pesticides and
genetically modified
crops.
In the past, some 30 states and more than 50 certifiers, all
with different standards
and regulations, called
their own shots on what
could and couldn't be
deemed organic.
The USDA, whose National Organic Standards Board has been
working with food
companies and growers
since 1990 to develop
the standards, is
allowing three tiers of
organic claims, with
only the top tier
permitted to carry a
"USDA Organic"
seal.
Steve Demos, president of White Wave, the Denver,
Colorado-based soymilk
division of Dean Foods
Co., was quoted as
saying, "Now you
have a differentiation
between products. The
consumer is now given
the means to make a
credible choice."
Meeting the new USDA hurdles is worth the trouble, companies
said, if it means
keeping a stake in the
organic category, which
has been growing at
about 20 percent
annually.
Sales of organic foods are expected to reach $11 billion in
2003, according to the
Organic Trade
Association. Growth
remains promising, as
organics now account for
only 2 percent of foods
sold at retail.
Margot McShane, director of marketing for Half Moon Bay,
California-based juice
company Odwalla Inc.,
part of soft drink giant
Coca-Cola Co.'s Minute
Maid juice company, was
quoted as saying,
"We see organics as
a huge
opportunity." (hope
they keep the O157 out,
unlike in 1996 -- dp).
The story says that at
about $2.39 per
15.2-ounce bottle,
Odwalla's organic juices
cost about 9 percent
more than its regular
line. H.J. Heinz Co.'s
newly introduced Heinz
Organic Ketchup sells at
about $1.99 for a
14-ounce
container, 30 percent
more than regular Heinz.
A 15.2-ounce bottle of organic Naked Juice, made by Ultimate
Juice Co. of Basking
Ridge, New Jersey,
retails at about $2.89,
or about double the
price of a 16-ounce
carton of regular orange
juice from Pepsi-Co
Inc.'s Tropicana.
Reprinted with permission from the Biotechnology
Industry Organization
www.bio.org.
|