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UK supermarkets drop non-GM animal feedUK supermarkets M&S, Sainsbury’s, Co-Op, and Tesco will no longer require that the farm animals in their supply chains are fed a non-GM diet. In their statements Tesco and the Co-Op misled customers by claiming that the GM feed is not detectable in products like eggs, milk or chicken. This is not true. Studies have found that GM DNA in animal feed can be taken up by animals' organs and can be detected in the milk and meat that people eat. M&S, Co-Op, and Tesco are also misleading their customers by claiming that non-GM feed isn't available. In Brazil alone, there is enough non-GM soy to supply Europe's animal feed needs. The quantity of non-GM feed imported into Europe is going up year on year as supermarkets in France and Germany avoid GM feed because their customers don’t want it. The British public also don't want it. A survey found that 70% of consumers don’t trust supermarkets on GM and an FSA survey found 67% of consumers wanted products labelled if they come from animals fed on GM feed. Waitrose is the only UK supermarket to maintain its non-GM animal feed policy, showing that it can be done. Read more It's vital that the supermarkets get clear feedback on their change of policy. TAKE ACTION – write to the supermarkets. |
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"Raised without GMO" label comes to UKThe successful German government-backed "Ohne GenTechnik" (raised without genetic engineering) certification is now available for British producers and retailers who want to show consumers that their products come from animals fed a GM-free diet. Read more |
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Problems in salmon fed GM Bt maizeA feeding trial in salmon with Monsanto's GM Bt maize MON810 reveals less efficient feed utilisation, higher intestinal weight, and localised immune response in the intestine in the GM-fed fish. At least the first finding should be of interest to the fish farming industry, as it will affect the industry's profitability. Read more |
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Glyphosate may contribute to modern diseases - new paperAccording to a new peer-reviewed review of the scientific literature, glyphosate-based herbicides may be contributing to the modern diseases that have reached epidemic proportions in recent decades. These diseases include inflammatory bowel disease, obesity, depression, ADHD, autism, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, multiple sclerosis, cancer, infertility, and birth defects. Read more |
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Lobbywatch: Science Media Centre exposed for censorshipA group of scientists is questioning the impartiality of the Science Media Centre of New Zealand on GM after the SMC was found to be selectively using scientific opinion. This practice violates the SMC's own terms of reference, which require it to be "bias-free". In response to the publication of a peer-reviewed paper by Jack Heinemann, Sarah Agapito-Tenfen, and Judy Carman on regulators' mishandling of the risk assessment of new kinds of GM crops and products, the SMC published harsh criticisms of the paper by two Australian scientists. The SMC did not reveal that one of the scientists, Peter Langridge, had a conflict of interest with DuPont, which develops crop plants that were the subject of the peer-reviewed study by Heinemann and colleagues. The other scientist, David Tribe, has a long history of writing blogs and running a pro-GM industry campaign. The SMC also refused to publish letters from scientists who supported the study. Read more |
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Risks of dsRNA-type GMOsJack Heinemann and co-authors explain the risks of new-type dsRNA (double-stranded RNA) GMOs in an article for lay people. Read more |
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Troubled times at CSIRODisgruntled scientists claim the independence and therefore credibility of Australia's peak scientific body CSIRO is threatened by government and industry interference. They say CSIRO has largely jettisoned pure science and has become "a research arm of industry" and government. They also say is a toxic workplace where bullying is rife and outrageous behaviour by some managers has been ignored. Read more |
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Hunger games - new reportThe UK government’s Department for International Development (DFID) is using the aid budget to tighten the corporate stranglehold over the global food system. This report reveals how DFID has been using hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money with the express purpose of extending the power of agribusiness over the production of food, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. While this will increase the profits of corporate giants such as Monsanto, Unilever and Syngenta, it threatens to disempower small farmers and rural communities and condemn them to long-term poverty. Read more |
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Dietitican flags up Monsanto conflicts of interest in panel members - then SHE's made to leaveA dietitian working on a panel charged with setting policy on GM foods for the influential Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics says she was removed for pointing out that two of its members had ties to Monsanto. Read more |