Brussels, 23 June 2008 - As European farm
ministers meet today Friends of the Earth Europe, Greenpeace and the European
Farmers Coordination are stepping up calls for governments not to fall for
biotech industry propaganda that genetically modified (GM) crops are a solution
to the food and feed price crisis.
Today's European Agriculture Council comes at
a time when political attention has focused on GMOs as a potential solution,
including the UK Prime Minister reportedly calling for the EU to relax rules on
importing GM animal feed [1]. This is likely to involve dropping the EU's 'zero
tolerance' policy to allow contamination with GMOs not approved in the EU. The
European Commission is expected to put forward a proposal on this issue in the
coming weeks.
However, there is no evidence that GM crops
will help tackle the food and feed price rise crisis:
- There are many complex factors behind the
rise in food prices including the deregulation of agricultural trade, commodity
speculation, rise in oil prices, climate change, the global rush for biofuels
and the underlying unfair trade system [2];
- GM crops have failed to tackle hunger and poverty around the world [3];
- Around 60 governments have endorsed the conclusions of the 2008 UN and World
Bank 'International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development' (IAASTD) which found no role for
genetically modified crops in tackling future food needs [4]. The GMO industry
pulled out of this process last year and the US has refused to sign the final
report because it is not supportive of GMOs;
- Most GM crops cultivated around the world are grown in
intensive monocultures, have resulted in a massive increase in pesticide use
[5], and are used as animal feed in richer nations, not for food in poorer
countries;
- GM crops do not increase yields and attempts to develop
drought or salt tolerant GM crops have failed - no such crops are on the market
despite years of research;
- Patents and ownership underpinning GMOs mean that GM
crops are inherently unsuitable for small scale and resource-poor farmers;
- Evidence clearly shows that weakening the EU's GMO laws
to drop the 'zero tolerance' principle will not solve the high prices faced by
the European livestock and food industry.[6]
Helen
Holder, GMO coordinator for Friends of the Earth Europe said: "Governments are
seriously misled if they think that GM crops are going to help tackle the food
crisis - GM crops do not increase yields or tackle hunger and poverty. Instead
of helping the GM industry to cash-in on the food crisis, Europe should be
encouraging a radical shift towards sustainable farming systems and abandoning
its biofuels target which is fuelling high food and feed prices."
Marco Contiero,
Greenpeace EU GMO campaign director said: "There is no one-size-fits-all solution to the
current food price increase. Any claim that a single technology such as genetic
engineering is a silver bullet for our future food supply is plainly false and
distracts attention from the real solutions. Farming methods that ensure higher
yields, that are more climate resilient, which do not destroy natural resources
and can provide better livelihoods for farmers around the world are the only
way forward."
Gerard Choplin,
coordinator of European Farmers Coordination from CPE said: "European farmers can
produce the animal feed needed. The European Union must, through its current
and future reforms of the Common Agriculture Policy, shift away from dependence
on imported animal feed by adopting policies to encourage farmers to cultivate
protein crops and develop grasslands."
***
For more information please contact:
Helen Holder, Friends of the Earth Europe GMO
coordinator, tel. +32 (0)2 542 0182, +32 (0)474 857638 (mob.),
helen.holder@foeeurope.org
Francesca Gater, Friends of the Earth Europe
Communications Officer, tel. +32 2542 6105, (mob.) +32 485 930 515,
francesca.gater@foeeurope.org
Marco Contiero, Greenpeace EU GMO policy
director, tel. +32 (0)2 274 19 06, +32 (0)477 77 70 34 (mob.)
marco.contiero@greenpeace.org
G�rard Choplin, Coordinator,
European Farmers' Coordination (CPE), tel. +32(0) 2 217 3112, +32 (0)473257378
(mob.) cpe@cpefarmers.org
***