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  by Ed Andrieski
 
			Associated PressFebruary 25, 2011
 
			from
			
			USAToday Website 
			  
			You may not want to eat genetically 
			engineered foods. Chances are, you are eating them anyway.
 Farmhand Jason Adler walks through a field of sugar beets on 
			the Rasmussen farm near Longmont, Colo. A federal judge in 
			California has ordered plants that produce seeds for genetically 
			modified sugar beets be destroyed, saying there is a significant 
			risk the plantings will cause environmental harm.
 
 Genetically modified plants grown from seeds engineered in labs now 
			provide much of the food we eat. Most corn, soybean and cotton crops 
			grown in the United States have been genetically modified to resist 
			pesticides or insects, and corn and soy are common food ingredients.
 
 The Agriculture Department has approved three more genetically 
			engineered crops in the past month, and the Food and Drug 
			Administration could approve fast-growing genetically modified 
			salmon for human consumption this year.
 
 Agribusiness and the seed companies say their products help boost 
			crop production, lower prices at the grocery store and feed the 
			world, particularly in developing countries.
			
			The FDA and
			
			USDA say the engineered foods 
			they've approved are safe - so safe, they don't even need to be 
			labeled as such - and can't be significantly distinguished from 
			conventional varieties.
 
 Organic food companies, chefs and consumer groups have stepped up 
			their efforts - so far, unsuccessfully - to get the government to 
			exercise more oversight of engineered foods, arguing the seeds are 
			floating from field to field and contaminating pure crops. The 
			groups have been bolstered by a growing network of consumers who are 
			wary of processed and modified foods.
 
 Many of these opponents acknowledge that there isn't much solid 
			evidence showing genetically modified foods are somehow dangerous or 
			unhealthy.
 
			  
			It just doesn't seem right, they say. 
			It's an ethical issue. 
				
				"If you mess with nature there's a 
				side effect somewhere," says George Siemon, CEO of Organic 
				Valley, the nation's largest organic farming cooperative, which 
				had more than $600 million in sales last year.    
				"There is a growing awareness that 
				our system makes us all guinea pigs of sorts." 
			The U.S. government has insisted there's 
			not enough difference between the genetically modified seeds its 
			agencies have approved and natural seeds to cause concern.  
			  
			But Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, 
			more so than his predecessors in previous administrations, has 
			acknowledged the debate over the issue and a growing chorus of 
			consumers concerned about what they are eating. 
				
				"The rapid adoption of GE crops has 
				clashed with the rapid expansion of demand for organic and other 
				non-GE products," Vilsack said in December as he considered 
				whether to approve genetically modified alfalfa.    
				"This clash led to litigation and 
				uncertainty... Surely, there is a better way, a solution that 
				acknowledges agriculture's complexity, while celebrating and 
				promoting its diversity." 
			Vilsack later approved the
			
			engineered alfalfa for use - along 
			with sugar beets and a type of corn used in ethanol - to the 
			disappointment of the organic industry, but he said the department 
			would do additional research on ways to prevent contamination of 
			natural seeds and improve detection of contamination.
 Organic companies have praised Vilsack for even acknowledging the 
			issue, as large seed companies like
			
			Monsanto and the substantial chunk 
			of agribusiness that use their seeds have long held sway at USDA. 
			The organic industry fears contamination could hurt sales of its 
			products, especially in Europe, where consumers have been extremely 
			hesitant about biotech foods.
 
 While opponents of engineered foods haven't found federal agencies 
			overly receptive to their concerns, they've been able to delay some 
			USDA approvals with lawsuits.
 
			  
			The alfalfa decision followed a lengthy 
			court battle that was closely watched not only by the organic 
			industry, but by consumers - a development opponents believe will 
			help their cause. 
				
				"We're seeing a level of reaction 
				that is unprecedented," says Jeffrey Smith, an activist who has 
				fought the expansion of genetically engineered foods since they 
				were first introduced 15 years ago and written two books on the 
				subject.    
				"I personally think we are going to 
				hit the tipping point of consumer rejection very soon." 
			Many consumers also have followed the 
			Food and Drug Administration's consideration of an
			
			engineered salmon that grows twice 
			as fast as the conventional variety. 
			  
			If the FDA approves the fish for sale, 
			it will be the first time the government has allowed genetically 
			modified animals to be marketed for humans to eat.
 Consumer interest in the issue has magnified in the past five years, 
			along with interest in eating locally grown and organic foods, said 
			Organic Valley's Siemon. Young, educated consumers who are driving 
			much of the organic market have no interest in eating crops derived 
			from a laboratory, he said.
 
 Genetically modified crops were introduced to the market in 1996. 
			That year, engineered corn accounted for less than 5% of the total 
			crop. Last year, the USDA estimated that 70% of the nation's corn 
			acreage was planted with herbicide-tolerant corn and 63% had been 
			planted with insect-resistant seeds. Rates for soybeans and cotton 
			are even higher.
 
 The federal government approves genetically modified plants and 
			animals on a case by case basis, with the FDA and USDA looking at 
			the potential effects on food safety, agriculture and the 
			environment. Critics say the process needs to be more thorough and 
			more research should be done with an eye on potential dangers. 
			Agencies often rely on companies' own data to make their decisions.
 
 The genetic engineering industry says its products already receive 
			far more scrutiny than most of the food people put in their mouths. 
			It also says 15 years of consumption with no widely recognized 
			health problems shows much of the concern is overhyped.
 
 David B. Schmidt, who heads the
			
			International Food Information Council 
			Foundation, a food-industry funded group that has polled 
			consumers on genetically modified foods, said their responses depend 
			on how the issue is framed. When pollsters tell consumers that some 
			foods can be engineered to have health benefits - such as biotech 
			soybeans designed to reduce trans fats in soybean oil - they become 
			more open to them.
 
			  
			Most consumers are more open to 
			modifications in fruits and vegetables than in animals, he added.
 Still, many people don't know what to think. About half of 
			the consumers the foundation has polled recently have either been 
			neutral on the subject or didn't know enough to have an opinion.
 
 Dan Barber, a well-known New York chef who grows his own food 
			and sits on President Barack Obama's
			
			Council on Physical Fitness, Sports and 
			Nutrition, said the growing popularity of organic foods 
			has given an "economic legitimacy" to the criticism.
 
 He believes messing with nature will always have collateral damage.
 
			  
			And, the more genetically modified crops 
			are used, he said, the more pure crops will become compromised. 
				
				"Once you head down that road you 
				don't turn back," Barber said.   |