GMO Survey
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9/7/2004 - Despite tough new rules on GM food labels, food makers will stick
to non-GM alternatives as new evidence from the UK shows British consumers
will continue to refuse to buy foods containing biotech ingredients. (via
Nutraingredients)
In fact, a new report from consumer group Which? shows that consumers in the
UK feel even more strongly about this than they did two years ago.
"Consumers clearly don't want GM food and are hardening their stance against
it. It's hardly surprising when questions still remain about the risks for
health and the environment," said Malcolm Coles, editor of Which?.
More than six out of 10 people (61 per cent) polled on behalf of the
consumer magazine said they were concerned about the use of GM material in
food production - up from 56 per cent in 2002.
The survey of almost 1,000 people also recorded a rise in the number who
said they tried to avoid GM food and a fall in the percentage who backed the
widespread growth of GM crops in the UK.
"The government has ignored public opinion on this subject for long enough.
It needs to rethink its policy before going ahead with growing GM crops
commercially," added Coles.
Igniting the wrath of consumer groups, the UK government approved the
commercial growing of one variety of genetically-modified maize earlier this
year. Environment Secretary Margaret Beckett gave a qualified green light to
the herbicide-tolerant maize for animal feed but rejected commercial
cultivation of GM beet and oilseed rape.
The survey also highlighted problems relating to the labelling of GM
material, new rules for which were introduced by Brussels just a few months
ago. Foods that contain GM ingredients or derivatives should say so on the
label, but foods can contain a small amount of GM material (0.9 per cent)
without being labelled as GM if the manufacturer can show that contamination
could not be avoided.
"It's easy for soya and maize - used in a huge range of processed foods - to
become contaminated with GM material. Tests by Warwickshire Trading
Standards found soya mince that was more than 50 per cent GM material - even
though the label didn't mention GM," said Which?.
Shoppers are not only concerned about GM ingredients in food; 68 per cent
want manufacturers to go one step further and source non-GM animal feed, so
meat and dairy products would have no links with the GM process.
"At the moment, all supermarkets' own brand milk and much of their meat
comes from animals fed on GM feed. The only milks that make the grade are
M&S milk and Sainsbury's Selected Farm semi-skimmed milk, and milk labelled
organic," claims the Which? report.
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