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View Full Version : One less GMO threat for Italy : GMO corn MON810 banned!



MorningSong
12th July 2013, 17:19
Yaaaay! GMO corn MON810 has been banned for the Italian territories!

The original news article in Italian:

http://www.adnkronos.com/IGN/Sostenibilita/World_in_Progress/Stop-alla-coltivazione-di-mais-geneticamente-modificato-MON810_32389620230.html

From GeneWatch.org:


Only two GM crops have been approved for commercial growing in the EU. One is a variety of pest-resistant maize (Bt maize) produced by Monsanto (known as MON810). This is grown mainly in Spain (and in smaller quantities in some other countries) for use in animal feed. Cultivation of MON810 is banned in France, Germany, Greece, Austria, Luxemburg and Hungary.


Rome, July 12:

Italy on Friday banned the cultivation of a genetically modified (GM) corn seed made by US company Monsanto, citing environmental concerns.

The agriculture ministry said Italian and European scientific studies had found that the insect-resistant MON810 seed could harm biodiversity, possibly posing a threat to “aquatic organisms.”

Farming lobby Coldiretti backed the government decision, noting that a poll it commissioned in June showed that 76 per cent of Italians oppose GM crops.

Several other European countries — including France, Germany and Poland — have prohibited MON810, even though such national bans are controversial, since the European Union has yet to decide whether to renew an existing authorisation for the seed.
(This article was published on July 12, 2013)

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/international/italy-bans-cultivation-of-gm-corn-seed/article4909253.ece

This is from April, when the motion to ban MON810 "began":


mmediate release (05 Apr 2013)
Italy’s GM Maize Ban Tips EU Balance, Leaves UK in the Cold

The announcement this week that Italy intends to ban the cultivation of Monsanto’s MON810 [1] GM maize, following a report by the Italian Health Ministry, represents a significant development in the long-term prospects for GM crops in the European Union and leaves the UK Government increasingly isolated among the largest Member States.

Nine Member States now ban Monsanto’s insect resistant MON810 (the only GM crop grown in the EU), outnumbering the five countries [2] that permit it to be gown. Bans are currently in place in France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Greece, Hungary, Bulgaria, Austria and Luxemburg. In the past EC attempts to overturn bans in Hungary and Austria were supported by the UK but failed to achieve the necessary votes to be carried. Spain grows over 90% of the European GM maize crop.

The nine countries banning MON810 have 56% of the total EU population and 52% of all farmland (56% of arable land). MON810 is grown for grain (mainly for animal feed) and not silage. MON810 is not grown in northern European countries, such as the UK and Sweden, because in these climates grains do not ripen in time to be harvested and the European Corn Borer, which the maize is genetically modified to resist, is not a pest.

This means over 70% of EU arable land is either unsuitable for MON810 or has banned it.

In 2012 the EU area under GM cultivation fell in three of the five countries that permit MON810 to be cultivated. Only in Portugal and Spain was there an increase in cultivation. In the next largest grower, the Czech Republic, the area under MON810 has fallen 64% since 2008, and in Romania the area under MON810 fell from over 6,000ha in 2008 to just 189ha in 2012. [2]

In terms of voting at the Council of Ministers, Italy’s decision to join the countries banning the GM crop now makes it very difficult for the Commission to take any action to lift the bans because the nine Member States have 162 votes out of the 345 total, which means a qualified majority against the bans (255 votes) is impossible to achieve.

Commenting on the latest developments in the EU, Pete Riley of GM Freeze said:

“The Italian’s decision to ban Monsanto’s maize is further evidence that the major agricultural nations of Europe reject this GM technology. It also undermines the desires of the European Commission and the UK Government to force GM crops on an unwilling European public. The pro-GM position of UK farm minister Owen Paterson is looking even more isolated than it was last week.

“Three out of four of the largest countries in Europe now oppose the cultivation of the only GM crop which can be grown commercially in 2013. The European Commission should take note and adopt policies that will make Europe GM-free, including encouraging the import of GM-free soya for animal feed to meet public demand. Instead the Commission has a record of dogmatic inflexibility on GM issues, so it is up to Member States to push through changes that meet public demands for GM-free production and to switch to more environmentally friendly farming method based on agroecology. Insect resistant GM crops like MON810 merely encourage farmers to adopt unsustainable rotations and farming practices.”

http://www.gmfreeze.org/news-releases/218/

More here, too:

http://www.gmo-free-regions.org/gmo-free-regions/italy/gmo-free-news-from-italy.html

Here's info on GMO corn MON810:

http://www.vib.be/en/news/documents/vib_dossier_mon810_eng.pdf

Tesla_WTC_Solution
12th July 2013, 19:21
I hope the whole world wakes up to the dirty deeds being accomplished by Monsanto.

We the people didn't ask the multinational corporations to harm our biosphere.

We owe it to the organisms who give us life to speak out against Monsanto genetic warfare.

MorningSong
17th July 2013, 20:08
Today I found a great site that has a searchable database on GMO in Europe...verrrrrrry cool!

http://www.testbiotech.de/en/database?submitted=1&field_sb_event_value[]=71

Here's the link to the MON810 Bt corn. Please read the section entitled "Specific risks and unitended effects".

Nobody can tell me that GMO is anything near "good".... but.. check out the site. It is very informative.

Corncrake
18th July 2013, 21:49
Major GM food company Monsanto 'pulls out of Europe'

Pulling out of Europe - I don't think so.

Monsanto, one of the world's biggest and best known genetically modified crops companies, is effectively pulling out of Europe, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.The news is a major blow to the nascent British GM industry which ministers have been championing this year as fears grow about food security.
Monsanto, whose name is synonymous with GM crops, confirmed that it is withdrawing all of its EU applications for approval for new crops.
The decision is understood to affect as many as 10 applications for approval for new GM crops. It is understood that Monsanto is pulling all of its applications for crops in frustration at delays over clearing existing crops at EU level.
It does not affect clearance for an existing crop grown from GM seeds in Portugal and Spain.
Monsanto currently sells only one biotech seed product in Europe — a biotech corn which is modified to be resistant to a destructive pest called the European corn borer. It accounts for less than one per cent of the corn grown in the EU.

Read more at:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/10186932/Major-GM-food-company-Monsanto-pulls-out-of-Europe.html

MorningSong
19th July 2013, 10:02
I truely doubt that, too, Corncrake. I have visited quite a few European pro-GMO sites and seen too many presentations from various GMO producers and lobbies. (The UK has a very very heavy hand in this as well as a German interest, as well.)

And...right now the USA-European Free Trade Agreement is switching to high speed.... should be finalized by 2014... and it's mostly about FOOD (and fracking)! That should be a hard hit for Europe's stance on isolationism and protectionism for traditionally regional food crops, et al.


An increasing number of politicians and citizens groups are demanding that the looming EU-US negotiations be conducted in an open way, not least because there are concerns that the deal will open the floodgate for GMOs and shale gas (fracking) in Europe, threatens digital and labour rights and will empower corporations to legally challenge a wide range of regulations which they dislike. One of the key aspects of the negotiations is that both the EU and US should recognize their respective rules and regulations, which in practice could reduce regulation to the lowest common denominator. The official language talks of “mutual recognition” of standards or so-called reduction of non-tariff barriers. For the EU, that could mean accepting US standards in many areas, including food and agriculture, which are lower than the EU’s.

The US wants all so-called barriers to trade, including highly controversial regulations such as those protecting agriculture, food or data privacy, to be removed. Even the leaders of the Senate Finance Committee, in a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, made it clear that any agreement must also reduce EU restrictions on genetically modified crops, chlorinated chickens and hormone-treated beef.

Demands include an “ambitious liberalisation of agricultural trade barriers with as few exceptions as possible”. Similarly, food lobby group Food and Drink Europe, representing the largest food companies (Unilever, Kraft, Nestlé, etc.), has welcomed the negotiations, with one of their key demands being the facilitation of the low level presence of unapproved genetically modified crops. This is a long-standing industry agenda also supported by feed and grain trading giants, including Cargill, Bunge, ADM, and the big farmers’ lobby COPA-COGECA.. Meanwhile, the biotech industry on both sides of the Atlantic is offering its “support and assistance as the EU and the US government look to enhance their trade relationship.”

http://www.globalresearch.ca/us-eu-free-trade-agreement-a-corporate-stitch-up-by-any-other-name/5339789