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21 December 2002

US MISINFORMATION EXPOSED/GM SERIES ON BBC RADIO 4 IN NEW YEAR/MONSANTO SALES DOWN, CEO OUT AND WEED RESISTANCE UP

1.GM SERIES ON BBC RADIO 4 IN NEW YEAR
2.US misinformation exposed
3.Monsanto Sales Down, CEO Out and Weed Resistance Up

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1.GM SERIES ON BBC RADIO 4 IN NEW YEAR

GM series on Radio 4 in early January. The first programme, with the Ignacio Chapela story and more, will go out on the 7th of January at 8 pm on Radio 4. It's repeated on Sunday the 12th of January at 5pm. The next one, about farmers and the next generation of GM, goes out on the 14th, and is repeated on the 19th, same times.

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2.Food for thought

Saturday December 21, 2002
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/letters/story/0,3604,864035,00.html

Lee McLenny of the US embassy states categorically (Letters, December 19) that none of the food aid offered to African countries came from the US. According to the USAID website, the Liberty Star was loaded in Port Charles, Lousiana on June 26 with 36,000 tonnes of GM maize for emergency food relief. The ship arrived in Durban, South Africa on July 29.

Charles Secrett
Friends of the Earth
...
USAID website: "The principal beneficiary of America's foreign assistance programs has always been the United States."

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3. Monsanto Sales Down, CEO Out and Weed Resistance Up

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P A N U P S
Pesticide Action Network Updates Service
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Monsanto Sales Down, CEO Out and Weed Resistance Up

December 20, 2002

On December 18, 2002, Monsanto announced the resignation of its president and chief executive Hendrik Verfaillie, ending a 26 year career with the company. In a press release the company stated that the resignation was a mutual decision. Both Verfaillie and the board of directors agreed "that the company's performance during the past two years has been disappointing." However, according to the St. Louis Dispatch, "industry analysts and those who have closely worked with Verfaillie over the years said they believe the board called for his resignation." Monsanto stocks fell almost 6% at the news; Monsanto's stock has fallen nearly 50% since January.

Monsanto's sales in the third quarter of 2002 dropped over 27%, while sales for the first nine months of the year were down by almost 19%, to US$3.45 billion from US$4.25 billion in 2001. Monsanto attributes the drops to unusually dry conditions in the U.S. throughout the summer and early autumn, plus a sharp decline in maize seed sales in Brazil and Argentina. Sales of Monsanto's herbicides, including its flagship herbicide Roundup (glyphosate), were down almost 43% in the third quarter. There was a 26% decline in herbicide sales (to US$1.5 billion) in the first nine months.

According to Monsanto, U.S. sales of Roundup will total 37-39 million gallons in 2002, approximately 76-80% of the total U.S. market for glyphosate of 49 million gallons. The company's share of the U.S. market is projected to fall to about 60% by 2005. Globally, Monsanto expects to sell 57 million gallons of Roundup in 2002, or about 38% of total world glyphosate sales.

In April 2002, Monsanto announced 700 job cuts primarily in Southeast Asia, New Zealand, Australia and North America. (Monsanto has nearly 14,600 workers worldwide.)

Monsanto also announced that global plantings of the company's genetically engineered crops have increased this year by 10.5% to 136.2 million acres (55.1 million hectares). In the U.S., Monsanto's Roundup Ready soybeans (soybeans engineered to be resistant to glyphosate), are the most widely planted genetically engineered crop; plantings increased 9.9% to 60.2 million acres in 2002. Plantings of Monsanto's Bt cotton (cotton engineered to produce an insecticide), however, declined in the U.S. (from 0.5 million acres to 0.4 million) and China (from 2.2 million acres to 1.9 million).

Another problem facing Monsanto is the growing number of cases of glyphosate-resistant weeds. For years, Monsanto maintained that resistance was not a problem. In the past few years, however, cases of resistance have been documented around the world. In 1996, resistant Rigid Ryegrass was found in one part of Australia; then in 1997, it was discovered in New South Wales. Cases of resistant Rigid Ryegrass have also been documented in California (2-5 sites) in 1998, and in South Africa (11-50 sites) in 2001.

In 1997, Goosegrass resistant to glyphosate was found in multiple orchards in Malaysia. Glyphosate-resistant Italian Ryegrass was discovered in orchards in Chile in 2001.Weed scientists there estimate that up to 500 acres may be infested.

In 2000, cases of resistant Horseweed (also known as Marestail) began appearing in soybean fields in the United States. Resistance has been documented in Delaware, Indiana, Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio and Tennessee. In Tennessee, resistant Horseweed was also found in cotton. Scientists estimate that from 100,000 to one million acres are infested with resistant Horseweed, primarily in Tennessee and Delaware.

Syngenta, one of Monsanto's top competitors, recently released a white paper examining the impact of glyphosate-resistant weeds on land value. The paper concludes that specific weed resistance can reduce a farm's rentable value by 17%, and that the greatest weed-resistance concern is glyphosate tolerance in Roundup Ready crops.

Sources:
Agrow: World Crop Protection News, November 29, 2002.
"Glypohsate-Resistant Weeds: Will They Decrease Land Value?, Syngenta,
http://www.ecast.protusfax.com/redirector.asp?URL=http://www.syngentacroppro
tection-us.com/Resources/Prod/Touchdown/Land_Values.pdf&BID=45925538&EID=449
1.
Monsanto press releases, December 18, 2002.
International Survey of Herbicide Resistant Weeds,
http://www.weedscience.org/.
Associated Press, December 18, 2002. St. Louis Dispatch, December 19, 2002.

Web: http://www.panna.org