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GE Foods Tutorial

Organic foods at risk

One of the best (and only) ways to avoid genetically engineered foods in the United States is to eat organically grown food. Organic foods are regarded by many people as more nutritious and delicious than their non-organic counterparts. Unfortunately, GE foods are creating a number of problems for organic growers.

1. Genetically engineered crops may contaminate organic crops.
Organic growers have warned for a long time that is impossible to avoid seed and pollen fieldpollution from genetically engineered crops. After all, wind carries seeds, and bees can carry contaminated pollen to fields three miles away.

In 1999, their fears were confirmed when Terra Prima, a Wisconsin organic chips exporter, was forced to destroy 87,000 bags of chips at a cost of $147,000. A European importer discovered that they were contaminated with genetically engineered corn.

In 2000, Britain's Environment minister, Michael Meacher, admitted that genetically engineered crops could contaminate normal crops no matter how far apart they are.

"Organic agriculture and genetically modified farming have both been growing rapidly. The collision of the two is inevitable," says Katherine DiMatteo, head of the Organic Trade Association. "We will probably as an industry begin lobbying for more regulations because this problem is developing so rapidly."

2. GE crops threaten one of organic farmers' most important tools.
Organic farmers do everything they can to eliminate pesticide use. But sometimes they use Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) as a last resort. Bt is a naturally occurring pesticide that is considered to be less harmful than most manmade pesticides.

Biotech companies have created genetically engineered potatoes and corn that produce Bt in every cell. Now millions of acres of these crops have been planted. Scientists fear that the pesticide will lose its effectiveness through overuse, and that pests will develop resistance to it. Organic growers will have lost one of their weapons of last resort.

3. Biotech companies have shown a desire to tap into organic markets.
Organic activists remember 1998 as the year commercial interests attempted to squeeze genetically engineered foods, irradiated foods and foods grown in toxic sewage sludge into the capitalistdefinition of "organic." At the time, the U.S. government was putting together standards for organic food. It was only after hundreds of thousands of Americans--one of the biggest activist efforts in years--wrote letters and petitioned the government to keep organic foods pure that officials dropped GE, irradiated and sewage sludge foods from the definition.

Many activists believe that biotech companies wanted to be included in the organic definition so they could tap into a burgeoning market that is growing at 20 percent per year.

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