Stop all GMO trials in the Phillipines
- Details
Greenpeace, April 17 2012
http://www.greenpeace.org/seasia/ph/press/releases/Bt-talong-unsafe-and-dangerous-to-environmental-health-report/
*Greenpeace calls on DA to stop all GMO trials and releases
A new report released today by Greenpeace confirms the dangers of cultivating genetically-modified organisms (GMOs). The report, which focuses on Bt eggplant, a GMO variety currently being field-tested in the Philippines, details how the spread of the genetically-modified Bt gene can cause eggplant to be an aggressive and problematic weed, threatening to overpower similar varieties.
In addition, Greenpeace maintains that GMOs grown in fields contaminate normal crops, threaten farmers’ livelihoods, and are dangerous to human health. The group called on the Department of Agriculture to stop all field trials of GMOs in the country, warning that the government's loose and cavalier policy favoring the open cultivation of GMO crops is effectively transforming the Philippines into an unprotected test site for dangerous crops with far-reaching and irreversible ecological consequences.
"GMO crops should not be cultivated outdoors anywhere in the world. When they are grown in important areas of diversity, like the Philippines, the serious risks of widespread contamination are magnified. In the case of Bt talong, with its built-in insect-resistance gene, this poses risks of creating aggressive weeds that may wreak havoc to local agriculture and natural habitats," said Daniel Ocampo, Sustainable Agriculture Campaigner of Greenpeace Southeast Asia.
"GMOs have never been proven safe, which is why they are highly regulated and even banned in many countries and regions. This report is but the latest addition to the growing body of scientific evidence which shows that GMOs are dangerous to our health and our environment, and pose significant threats to sustainable farming practices," he added.
The whole of South to Southeast Asia is the primary diversification centre for eggplant, home to its greatest morphological diversity (i.e. range of landraces and cultivars). India is its centre of diversity. Meanwhile, the Philippines has recorded 500 varieties of eggplant and related species. However, the report, an independent study commissioned by Greenpeace, cites that a major concern is the possibility that the newly introduced GMO gene, which provides the Bt eggplant with its own built-in insecticide, will confer a selective advantage that may enable it to out-compete and overrun natural vegetation. [1]
Not long ago, Greenpeace also exposed the results of 90-day lab tests conducted by GMO proponents on mice fed with Bt eggplant, which showed signs of toxicity in the liver and kidneys of the test subjects. Studies on Bt corn varieties, already being planted in the Philippines, also show similar results. [2]
Greenpeace and other environmental organizations, scientists, farmers groups, local governments and non-government organizations have been calling for a stop to the open field trials of the Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) eggplant, as well as outdoor cultivation of other GMO varieties. Field trials of Bt eggplant are currently being carried out in four provinces with plans to propagate the controversial crop in other places in the country such as in the Ilocos Region. In December 2010, the local government of Davao City took decisive precautionary action by uprooting Bt eggplant trials being conducted by the UP Mindanao Foundation.
Greenpeace urged the government to heed the precautionary principle and apply greater restraint in the approval of GMOs into the country whether for food, feed or processing, saying that the 59 GMO approvals issued by the Bureau of Plant Industry in the last 10 years is a scandal that undermines national attempts to mainstream organic and ecological agricuiture.
"Every time we plant GMOs we create an ecological problem. Every time we eat them, we put our health at risk. It's time that all of us, especially the government, recognize the dangers of GMOs," said Ocampo.
"Government regulators should focus on sustainable agriculture instead of loosely allowing the conduct of field trials and commercialization of such crops for eventual human consumption. Can we hold responsible officials from the DOA (Department of Agriculture) and BPI (Bureau of Plant Industry) accountable when serious and irreversible damage to the environment and public health occurs as a consequence of their actions?" he asked.
Greenpeace is an independent global campaigning organisation that acts to change attitudes and behaviour, to protect and conserve the environment, and to promote peace.
Contact Details:
Daniel Ocampo, Sustainable Agriculture Campaigner, +63917 8110469, (632) 332 1807 loc 112, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
JP Agcaoili, Media Campaigner, +63917 6312750, (632) 332 1807 loc 109, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Notes:
1. The full report is available at: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/publications/agriculture/2012/GE-Bt-brinjal-revisited.pdf and a summary from: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/Global/international/publications/agriculture/2012/ProblemsWithTheRelatives.pdf
2. http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/press/releases/seralini_study_MON863/