Sunday, December 30, 2012

Ten things you need to know about the Séralini study

by gmoseralini.org Admin | December 30th, 2012 | Critics answered |1 2 Comments

1. Most criticisms of Séralini’s study wrongly assume it was a badly designed cancer study. It wasn’t. It was a chronic toxicity study – and a well-designed and well-conducted one.

2. Séralini’s study is the only long-term study on the commercialized GM maize NK603 and the pesticide (Roundup) it is designed to be grown with. See here: Why is this study important?

3. Séralini used the same strain of rat (Sprague-Dawley, SD) that Monsanto used in its 90-day studies on GM foods and its long-term studies on glyphosate, the chemical ingredient of Roundup, conducted for regulatory approval.

4. The SD rat is about as prone to tumours as humans are. As with humans, the SD rat’s tendency to cancer increases with age.

5.Compared with industry tests on GM foods, Séralini’s study analyzed the same number of rats but over a longer period (two years instead of 90 days), measured more effects more often, and was uniquely able to distinguish the effects of the GM food from the pesticide it is grown with.

6. If we argue that Séralini’s study does not prove that the GM food tested is dangerous, then we must also accept that industry studies on GM foods cannot prove they are safe.

7. Séralini’s study showed that 90-day tests commonly done on GM foods are not long enough to see long-term effects like cancer, organ damage, and premature death. The first tumours only appeared 4-7 months into the study.

8. Séralini’s study showed that industry and regulators are wrong to dismiss toxic effects seen in 90-day studies on GM foods as “not biologically meaningful”. Signs of toxicity found in Monsanto’s 90-day studies were found to develop into organ damage, cancer, and premature death in Séralini’s two-year study.

9. Long-term tests on GM foods are not required by regulators anywhere in the world.

10. GM foods have been found to have toxic effects on laboratory and farm animals in a number of studies.

SOURCE : http://www.gmoseralini.org/ten-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-seralini-study/

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Istanbul Organic Farmers Market

Feriköy Organic Market

  • Feriköy Organic Market
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Excitement was in the air when we found our way to the Feriköy Organic Market. Set up in the Şişli Municipality Car Park near the Uğur Center in Bomonti by the Buğday Association for Ecological Living (Buğday Ekolojik Yaşamı Destekleme Derneği), every Saturday from 7am to 5pm organic farmers and stores sell their wares under the covered garage and nearby tarps set up to shield from rain and sun. 

Shoppers can find everything from organic, seasonal produce to organic honey, bread, cheese, and other dairy products to organic cosmetics, detergents, and bath products at the various stalls. As in any weekly market, a tea and gözleme (the Turkish equivalent of a quesadilla but stuffed with kaşar (a salty hard cheese similar to kaseri), potatoes, or spinach, or a combination of all three) stand also take their place under the tents -but everything is organic, of course.

Other organic markets organized by Buğday take place in Kartal, Beylikdüzü, and Bakırköy, but for those who are centrally located, the one at Feriköy is the top choice. Şişli Belediyesi Otopark, Lala Şahin Sokak, Bomonti Caddesi, Bomonti



SOURCE: http://vimeo.com/45812021
http://www.theguideistanbul.com/news/view/968/ferikoy-organic-

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Millets in mid-day meal to boost nutrition

SUNITHA SEKAR | CHENNAI, December 14, 2012

Come January, schoolchildren may savour the flavour of ragi puttu and cholam biscuits in their mid-day meals.
The State government plans to introduce millets in the mid-day meal owing to its increased nutritional value from January 26, 2013, said T.Thanasekaran, deputy director of the Agriculture department.
“The process is on to include millets in the nutritious meal scheme and we hope to launch it on the Republic Day. Initially, we may introduce items such as puttu, kali or dosai with finger millet (Ragi) and biscuits with barnyard millet (cholam). Soon, depending on how the children receive the recipe we may think of including millets in the Public Distribution System (PDS),” he said.
This move comes in the backdrop of the Agriculture Ministry urging the States to introduce millets in the scheme last September.
“This time, the monsoon can be called a near failure and we have incurred deficit of rainfall. When the production of paddy falls, cultivation of millets, which are highly drought-resistant, could be increased. We are trying to increase the productivity of millets by distributing improved variety of seeds to farmers,” he added.
For quite sometime now, the State has been organising demonstrations and campaigns for farmers to promote cultivation of millets.
V.R. Ananthoo of Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA) who also runs reStore— a not-for-profit store that sells organic products sourced from farmers and underprivileged groups — was asked to facilitate a meeting by the State Planning Commission in October to promote millets. In fact, the officers were given an eight-course millet meals with dishes such as Varagu Bissibelabath, Saamai curd rice etc.
“Just when we had been working at reStore with a focus to bring back millets, we organised a meeting for the Planning Commission with secretaries of various departments to sensitise them about millets. Since millets are easy to grow, drought-resistant and replenish the soil as well, it can be used to address several issues including malnutrition,” he said.
Dr. G. Sivaraman, a Siddha physician, said malnutrition in the State could best be tackled by inclusion of millets in the mid-day meal.
“Malnutrition is mainly caused due to low protein levels in the body. Finger millets and barnyard millets will increase protein content in the body. Plus, millets are low glycemic functional food which prevents non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, cardio-vascular diseases and cancers,” he said.

  • Plan to introduce puttu, kali or dosai with finger millet
  • New recipe likely from January 26

  • Source: http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-tamilnadu/millets-in-midday-meal-to-boost-nutrition/article4198341.ece
  • Sunday, December 9, 2012

    ARTCLE : A new rice every day?

    The Hindu
    Sci-Tech » Agriculture
    Updated: December 9, 2012 09:38 IST
    BIODIVERSITY
     
    ASHISH KOTHARI

    The small farmer is increasingly getting the short shrift, and control over farming is moving into the hands of the private corporate sector. This does not paint a happy picture.

    Natwar Sarangi could eat a new variety of rice every day of the year. None of it bought in the market. When I met this remarkable farmer in a small village in Odisha, I realised the magical potential of India’s ‘ordinary’ peasants. A potential sadly neglected by our agricultural bureaucracy and ‘development’ planners.
     
    Natwarbhai, 80+, is a resident of Narishu village, near Niali in Cuttack district. A retired schoolteacher, he has been practising organic farming for the last decade or so, and swears by its potential to feed India’s population. He says some of the varieties he grows yield over 20 quintals per acre, higher than the so-called ‘high-yielding’ varieties that farmers around him get after using chemical fertilizers and pesticides. And he spends much less, since his main inputs are gobar, natural pesticides when occasionally needed, and labour.
     
    Natwarbhai was earlier a ‘modern’ farmer, lured into it by officials and traders, involving high-yielding varieties, chemical fertilizers, and pesticides. One day, while watching a labourer spray Carbofuran (a highly toxic pesticide), he was horrified to see him stagger and collapse. Rushed for treatment, the worker survived, but not Natwarbhai’s faith in the new agriculture. Especially after the labourer told him: “I could not breathe, my head was reeling”; and especially after, having buried the remaining stock of Carbofuran in a pit in his fields, Natwarbhai “saw dead snails, snakes, and frogs floating in the water that had accumulated there; I immediately wondered what would be happening to the earthworms and micro-organisms that I knew kept the soil alive.”
     
    Natwarbhai switched to organic inputs, but with the high yielding varieties that the agricultural establishment had distributed. His son Rajendra, by now having become involved in a number of environmental movements, advised him to try traditional crop varieties. The problem was, most such varieties had gone out of cultivation in the area.
     
    Around this time (1999), along with Rajendra another young man of the village, Jubraj Swain, had been active with relief and reconstruction work after a super-cyclone. Now they set off to find traditional rice varieties; travelling over 5000 km within (and a bit outside) Odisha, they brought back dozens of varieties still being grown by so-called ‘backward’ farmers. Natwarbhai tried them all, noting down their names, characteristics, and productivity. He and Jubraj continued even after the tragic death of Rajendra due to cerebral malaria, eventually reaching the astounding figure of 360 varieties (90per cent of these from Odisha). When I expressed astonishment at this, Natwarbhai laughed: “we are aiming to have at least 500. This is in any case only a small fraction of the total diversity that Indian farmers have created”.
     
    So true. I remember when coordinating India’s National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan process a decade ago, I had come across the mindboggling fact that the country’s rice diversity was anything between 50,000 and 300,000 varieties!
     
    How does Natwarbhai keep track of this diversity, year after year? He said he and his colleagues kept an album, in which they noted down each variety’s characteristics. I was later shown a two-volume set of this album by Sudhir Pattnaik of the Oriya journal Samadrusti; it had tiny packets of each kind of rice variety, with key features of their growth, performance, and values written alongside.
     
    Diversity was nice, but would it feed India’s growing population? Natwarbhai was categorical: “Without doubt. Firstly, I get as much or more average rice production on my land as those using chemicals in this region; secondly, I can grow pulses as a next crop, and then gourds or other crops as the third … all on the same plot of land. And I get better fodder and mulching material. Overall productivity is therefore higher than my neighbours who use new seeds and chemicals. If land is not turned to non-food cash crops like tobacco, we would easily produce enough food with organic farming.”
     
    So why then were his neighbours not switching to organic? Natwarbhai explained that the government and corporations were constantly giving ‘incentives’, e.g. subsidies on chemicals, and filling the cultivators’ minds with promises of bumper crops and high returns. Another factor was that many of the traditional varieties had tall stalks, and ‘lodged’ (fell down) if there were unseasonal rains. But Natwarbhai asserted that even with this, productivity did not drop significantly, provided it did not keep on raining. Yet another reason was that many of the lands here were being cultivated by sharecroppers, who had to do what their absentee landlords told them to.
     
    I reflected on this a bit. Farmers here were probably also being seduced by news from other regions of India, some of which had achieved over 30 quintals per acre; no-one was telling that this was possible only with increasing amounts of external inputs, that the land would simply not sustain this intensity of cultivation for long, and that growing costs of inputs would eventually reduce profit margins. Official records showed that in any case, HYV rice had yielded an average of around 15 quintals in Orissa.
     
    Other farmers were slowly getting interested in Natwarbhai’s methods. He and others have organised dozens of meetings with farmers, and offered free seeds for those willing to test them out (on condition that if they had a good crop, they would return twice the amount, to go into a grain bank). The journal Samadrusti also did its bit in public outreach. If only the government would help, these efforts would go much further. Unfortunately even civil society organisations were not always helpful; Natwarbhai pointed to a patch of black-grain paddy (Kali Jiri) swaying gently in the breeze, and sadly recounted how an institution from Chennai run by a famous agricultural scientist had taken some samples, and then claimed credit for the variety!
     
    I asked Jubraj why he had not gone looking for a job in the city, like his other young colleagues? He was, after all, a graduate in history. His answer was simple: “I enjoy this. I think it is more worthwhile than a job in the city”. Productivity on his land? “I’m getting 18-20 quintals per acre; those using new seeds and chemicals here were getting less, while spending more.” In a general scenario of the newer generations turning away from occupations like farming, it was good to see the young man wanting to carry on Natwarbhai’s mission.
     
    In a recent address to an international conference on biodiversity in Hyderabad, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said: “Biodiversity, found in our forests and our fields, could provide us keys to the solutions of the future. So we need to build a movement to conserve traditional varieties of crops.” Nice words. But the Indian government’s agricultural policies and programmes have systematically destroyed the diversity and knowledge of thousands of years of intelligent, innovative farming systems. Increasingly they are marginalising the small cultivator, and handing over controls over farming to the private corporate sector. Efforts like Natwarbhai’s and Jubraj’s, small as they may seem, are crucial elements of sustainability that India is going to desperately need when its food production systems face ecological and social collapse.
     
    Ashish Kothari is with Kalpavriksh, Pune
     

    Wednesday, December 5, 2012

    BOOK: Small producer agency in the globalised market: making choices in a changing world

    International expectations for the world’s half-billion small farms are growing, against a very dynamic backdrop. Small-scale farming is expected to contribute solutions in areas ranging from poverty reduction and food security to climate change adaptation. Most of the ‘inclusive business’ models and value chain interventions already set up to do that are reaching only a narrow minority of farmers. To get the future right for the majority there is a need to ask the right questions. Instead of thinking about how to ‘make markets work for the poor’, we must look at how small-scale farmers make markets work for them. Farmers themselves are facing and effecting rapid changes in markets, in land and other resources, and in the demographics of rural communities.

    This book presents the results of a three-year Knowledge Programme led by IIED, Hivos and a global Learning Network, it integrates knowledge of researchers and practitioners working or trading directly with small producers across three continents. It focuses on agency — how small-scale farmers navigate formal and informal, global and local markets, their strategies, interests, expectations and limitations, and how they make choices in the dynamic context of a restructuring agrifood sector. From this perspective, globalisation and modernisation appear not to be sweeping the world economy clean, but spreading in parallel with vibrant informal and local economies.

    This book challenges our institutions and the development community, both in terms of our assumptions on the roles of smallholders and agribusiness and how we go about the process of generating knowledge and developing effective policies and interventions.

    Vorley, B., del Pozo-Vergnes, E., Barnett, A. 2012. Small producer agency in the globalised market: making choices in a changing world. IIED, London; HIVOS, The Hague.

    download link : http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/16521IIED.pdf?

    SOURCE: http://pubs.iied.org/16521IIED.html

    Sunday, December 2, 2012

    Monthly conferences to facilitate smooth supply of organic products

    CITIES » BENGALURU

    Updated: December 1, 2012 09:43 IST
    To ensure smooth supply of organic products from producers to retailers in the city, the State government will initiate monthly conferences between these two important stakeholders in the sector.
    “These will be through videoconferencing from the State capital with retailers participating in the conference with producers at all the district centres,” K.V. Sarvesh, Director, Department of Agriculture, told The Hindu. He said that this would be a bridge-building exercise between the two.
    His comments came after an interactive session between organic producers and retailers at the three-day BioFach India, an international organic trade fair here on Friday.
    The interaction also saw retailers expressing concerns about the supply chain in the sector.
    According to another senior official in the department, the videoconference could help the retailer plan his stock and farmers in managing their produce.
    Certification agency
    The State-owned Karnataka State Seed Certification Agency has started the Karnataka State Organic Certification Agency, an organic certifying agency with a team of qualified and experienced personnel, trained by consultants in organic certification methods and standards as per the National Programme for Organic Production guidelines.
    According to officials, there are four accredited organic certification agencies in Karnataka, and despite developments in the organic sector the State did not have a government agency.
    SOURCE: http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/bangalore/monthly-conferences-to-facilitate-smooth-supply-of-organic-products/article4153380.ece

    Wednesday, November 21, 2012

    Bangalore emerging as a major city of ‘organic brands’

    BioFach India, an offshoot of World Organic Trade Fair BioFach in Nurnberg, plans to hold its organic fair in Bangalore from November 29 to December 1.
    The fourth edition of BioFach India 2012 by Nuremberg Messe is supported by the Karnataka Department of Agriculture and the International Competence Centre for Organic Agriculture (ICCOA).
    “The fair is to facilitate organic production, manufacturing, trade and it is the single platform where various stake-holders in the organic value chain congregate to network,” said International Competence Centre for Organic Agriculture (ICCOA) Executive Director Manoj Kumar Menon.
    Talking about trends in the organic food consumption in Bangalore, Menon said, “The city has emerged as a prominent organic brands city in the country.”
    “Compared with other cities which have only a few of them, Bangalore has brands in black pepper, ginger, turmeric and coffee etc. The city has also attracted major crops to do good volumes on a daily basis,” he added.
    Menon expressed confidence that the BioFach India would further boost the organic farming as well as organic trade in Karnataka. At the last year’s fair organic cotton and jaggery had fetched some business.
    He explained that the previous edition of international organic trade fair held in Bangalore had seen a total business transaction of Rs. 17.5 crore. The major chunk of this had gone to Karnataka as the home state had accounted for a business of Rs. 11 crore.
    Karnataka Principal Secretary Agriculture Department Bharatlal Meena said 141 exhibitors including 16 international players had so far confirmed their participation in the event.
    Similarly, various States including Kerala, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim and Mizoram were participating in the event being held at the Bangalore Palace Grounds.
    Meena said country accounted for 10.9 lakh hectares of crops under certified organic cultivation including 51,500 hectares in Karnataka. In 2011, the exports of organic crops had earned revenue of Rs.600 crore for the country while the domestic sales had fetched Rs. 300 crore, he noted.
    In a bid to encourage organic agriculture in the state, the Agriculture Department had taken up a plan to promote organic farming in about 100 acres of land in each taluk.
    (This article was published on November 20, 2012)
    SOURCE: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/states/biofach-india-meet-from-nov-29-to-dec-1-in-bangalore/article4115491.ece

    Monday, November 19, 2012

    To market, to market…

    METROPLUS » FOOD
    Updated: November 19, 2014 12:37 IST
    AKILA KANNADASAN

    Members of Organic Farmers Market. Photo: M. Srinath
    The HinduMembers of Organic Farmers Market. Photo: M. Srinath

    Organic Farmers Market, a collective of youngsters with hole-in-the-wall organic stores, brings to Chennai the best of produce from across the country

    Every grain of rice, millet, and pulse in the garage has a story to it. They have journeyed from farms near and far to occupy the racks at the hub of the Organic Farmers Market (OFM) at Kasturba Nagar, Adyar. Farmers with a heart have cultivated them — Mukesh from Nagpur, Chandrasekaran from Thalavady, Vijay Jardhari from Uttarakhand. Prod a little and you can find out the names of the people who grew them, and where they are from.
    It all began after the demise of organic farming pioneer G. Nammalvar. Organic activist Ananthoo of the Safe Food Alliance noticed that Nammalvar drew a lot of youngsters in the last two years of his life. ‘Why not involve them in a movement that will further the cause?’ he thought. “We identified 15 youngsters to run mono shops that will function like a cooperative,” explains Ananthoo. Also a founder-volunteer of non-profit organic store reStore, he started OFM in the same garage reStore was born in, six years ago.
    “The idea is to take organic food to the middle-class,” explains Gopi, who manages OFM’s hub. Members, who range from IT professionals to homemakers, stock organic products in small outlets at home or in shops in their neighbourhood. Sourced from a wide network of organic farms across the country, the products are sold with a “small margin, without involving middlemen”.
    Kamalakannan, a member, is in a village near Uthiramerur on his monthly farm visit, an OFM protocol, as he talks to us. A systems engineer in an IT firm in the city, he stocks organic products at home. “My wife and I take turns to look after the store,” he explains. Kamalakannan ensures he talks to as many people as possible on the goodness of organic food. “I set up stalls in places such as temple festival grounds to spread the word. Each of us should know where our food comes from.” Kamalakannan has brought his five-year-old son and a customer to Karuveppam Poondi village to find out just that. These farmer verification visits ensure that products are completely organic.
    OFM follows a strict purchase policy. Members take a lot of effort to ensure “source consistency”, according to Gopi. “We perform random, surprise checks at farms, talk to the farmers’ neighbours, and see if they own cows and goats for farming, rather than machinery,” adds Ananthoo.
    In essence, OFM wants to take consumers closer to Nature. Ananthoo is disturbed by the “sudden spurt of organic shops” in the city that sell branded organic products. “This is a danger,” he observes. “The food industry went wrong because of centralising and processing products to give them longer shelf lives. The consumer went far from the producer.”
    His movement is steadily gaining strength — IT employee Dhamodharan Chandrasekaran and his wife have set up a 9 x 10 square feet shop with OFM products; Rajesh, who was an HR software consultant, sells organic food at his electrical service centre; Seethalakshmi displays products at her meditation class; Rekha, an IT-professional-turned-farmer, has started a store at home… these men and women meet at the head-garage every month to discuss and ideate.
    With no distributors in the picture, they arrive at the garage when they run out of stock to purchase, pack and transport the items themselves. All of which, explains Gopi, cuts costs.
    S. Radhakrishnan, a member who is studying the effects of climate change on soil, says that the coming year will be very supportive to organic farming. “A lot of people are coming forward to cultivate organic food. By 2015, consumption of organic food would have doubled, when compared to the previous two years,” he foretells.
    Radhakrishnan provides technical and managerial support to “new-age farmers”, people in their twenties and thirties who have given up jobs in cities to turn farmers. This wave has also revived plenty of our traditional seed varieties. Radhakrishnan says he just received a box of bananas called ‘vellai singam’. “The farmer says they will be tastier than the yelakki banana,” he laughs. “Everything is coming back. Rice, pulses... The best about this is that I’m now able to give my products for a low price. I’m having a happy selling experience.”
    For details, visit their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/OrganicFarmersMarket1
    SOURCE: http://www.thehindu.com/features/metroplus/Food/organic-farmers-market-brings-to-chennai-the-best-of-produce-from-across-the-country/article6611433.ece

    Wednesday, November 7, 2012

    Organic cooperative to open five retail outlets

    The locations are Koramangala, Sanjaynagar, Banashankari, Rajajinagar and Mahalakshmi Layout

    Sunday, November 4, 2012

    WATCH : What are Roundup Ready & Bt Pesticide GMO crops? You need to know!


    Published on Nov 3, 2012
    The real question is HOW do we save our planet? Bees are crashing, 90% of our water contains pesticides, 80% of our food contains toxic GMOs, 85% of our forests are gone, and most alarmingly 50% of our fellow species are slated for extinction! Check out http://www.foundups.com - and learn how we can disrupt the startup of the few and in the process save our planet.


    Here is a great explanation on GMO and Bt pesticide. A must watch documentary by David Suzuki

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Su...
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Su...
    SOURCE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hjy-CJlzbM

    Thursday, November 1, 2012

    The GM maize rats

    Oct 31, 2012 | From the print edition
    Author(s): Latha Jishnu @ljishnu 
    Findings of the Seralini lab on effect of Monsanto’s GM maize on rats set off a global furore

    Three weeks ago, a university institute in Normandy, France, sparked fury, outrage and an astonishingly vicious battle between scientists across the world by publishing results of a two-year animal feeding study. The study involved one of the best known varieties of genetically modified (GM) maize and the most widely used glyphosate-based herbicide. The study was published by a team of scientists led by the highly regarded Gilles-Eric Seralini who heads the Institute of Biology at the University of Caen in France.
    GILLES-ERIC SERALINIWe are surprised by the violent and rapid reactions by scientists within 24 hours. Was it because of their financial interests?
    — GILLES-ERIC SERALINI, HEAD OF INSTITUTE OF BIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF CAEN, FRANCE
    Seralini and his team of seven conducted a lifetime feeding trial of the herbicide-tolerant maize known as NK603, a product of agribiotech giant Monsanto of the US, and of its extensively used herbicide Roundup, on 200 rats for two years. Roundup kills weeds without harming the crops. It was the first time that the health impact of a GM crop and a widely used pesticide was studied for this length of time and in a more comprehensive manner than studies done by regulatory agencies, industries or by research institutes. The two-year study was designed to correspond with the expected lifetime of a normal rat whereas the industry practice is 90-day study.
    The team used 100 female and 100 male rats. In both sets, some rats were fed NK603, some the GM maize sprayed with Roundup, and the third group was given drinking water with the lowest permissible limit of Roundup. A fourth, control group was fed a standard diet of the closest variety of non-GM maize.
    The results were alarming, according to the peer-reviewed paper published in Food and Chemical Toxicology, a journal from the reputed Elsevier stable. Rats that fed on NK603 or given water containing Roundup died much earlier than the rats in the control group and developed hormonal and sex-related effects. Females developed significant mammary tumours, pituitary and kidney problems, while males died mostly from severe kidney failure. Up to 50 per cent of the male rats and 70 per cent of females died prematurely, compared with only 30 per cent and 20 per cent in the control group.
    In female rats, the largest tumours were five times more frequent than in males, with 93 per cent being mammary tumours. These were deleterious to health due to their large size and caused impediments to breathing or nutrition and digestionIn female rats, the largest tumours were five times more frequent than in males, with 93 per cent being mammary tumours. These were deleterious to health due to their large size and caused impediments to breathing or nutrition and digestion
    The implications are extremely serious, says a press note issued by CRIIGEN, an independent organisation of scientific experts that studies genetically modified organisms (GMO), pesticides and impacts of pollutants on health and environment, on the research results. “They demonstrate the toxicity, both of a GMO with the most widely spread transgenic character and of the most widely used herbicide, even when ingested at extremely low levels (corresponding to those found in surface or tap water).” The scientists point out that these results call into question the adequacy of the current regulatory process which is used the world over in assessing the health risks associated with such products. They, therefore, demand that the market approval for these products should be immediately reviewed and urged the extension of the usual 90-day test to two years for agricultural GMOs.
    “It was surprising. We didn’t expect the kind of tumours that we saw appearing in the rats in the fourth month (industry trials end at three months) of our experiment,” says Robin Mesnage, member of the Seralini research team who was in India to attend the conference of parties to the Convention on Biodiversity in Hyderabad. “And these tumours in rats eating the Roundup-tolerant GM maize began to appear so much earlier than in the control group.”
    Interview
    MICHAEL ANTONIOU
    Major health implications for humans
    Michael Antoniou, head of the Nuclear Biology Group in the UK, has been studying the health effects of genetically modified (GM) crops since 1995.
    Explaining the genesis of the experiment, Mesnage said that the €3.2-million-study was conceived in 2008 when the first of the Seralini team’s researches into the effects of GM maize varieties on mammalian health was nearing completion. Those results which analysed Monsanto’s own 13-week “safety assurance study” by Bruce Hammond et al—the results were published in the very same Food and Chemical Toxicology in 2004—had highlighted concerns over new side effects that were sex-related and dose-dependent. “Effects were mostly associated with the kidney and liver,” notes the paper by Seralini and others.
    To see if the signs of liver and kidney toxicity escalated into something serious, Seralini’s team chose a chronic toxicity protocol as per OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development) guidelines, which is the general rule. And as the current paper, “Long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant genetically modified maize”, shows this, indeed, is the case.
    But the biotech industry and its cheerleaders have reacted with fury and criticisms that have as quickly been rebutted by independent scientists. Rejecting the findings, Monsanto says, “The study does not meet minimum acceptable standards for this type of scientific research, the findings are not supported by the data presented, and the conclusions are not relevant for the purpose of safety assessment.” (See ‘The company’s rebuttal’). It also makes the standard claim that “plant biotechnology has been in use for over 15 years without documented evidence of adverse effects on human or animal health or the environment.”
    Seralini’s professional standing—he has written over 100 scientific articles and has been a member of two French government commissions that oversee risk assessment of GMOs and monitor commercialised GMOs—has not stopped detractors from mounting personal attacks. But support has come from ENSSER (European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility) which says, “The vitriolic attacks evoked by the study reveal the lack of appropriate methodologies for long-term studies to assess the effects of life-time consumption of GM foods.”
    Company’s rebuttal
    Monsanto, developer of GM NK603 maize and Roundup herbicide, says:
    image
    • Research protocol does not meet OECD standards
    • Source and quality of maize used is unclear
    • Absence of critical details on diet preparation, dietary intake
    • Lack of data on changes in liver or kidney tissues
    • Mortality rates, tumour incidence fall within historical norms
    • Data presented highly selective
    • Lack of statistical analysis for morta lity/tumour incidence endpoints
    The quickest rejection of the study came from Maurice Moloney, institute director and chief executive of Rothamsted Research, who said: “Although this paper has been published in a peer–reviewed journal, there are anomalies throughout the paper that normally should have been corrected or resolved through the peer-review process. For a paper with such potentially important findings, it would have been more satisfying to have seen something with a more conventional statistical analysis.” Moloney, who is said to hold more than 300 patents, was earlier with Calgene where he developed the world’s first transgenic oilseeds, which led to the development of RoundUp Ready Canola and other such crops. Calgene was acquired by Monsanto in 1997.
    In response to the criticism, Seralini told Down To Earth that: “We are surprised by the violent and rapid reactions by scientists within 24 hours. Was it because of their financial interests? Or, were they involved in the insufficient assessment of agricultural GMOs on health?” But not surprisingly, he adds, “The first reactions have come essentially from people who have not published any peer-reviewed scientific papers on mammalian or human physiological and toxicological studies. This is the case with Maurice Moloney who works on GMO development and patents, not on food safety.”
    Moloney was the spearhead for a torrent of criticism from the industry and this has caused unease among independent scientists. Says Jack Heinemann, professor of molecular biology and genetics, University of Canterbury, New Zealand: “The reactions appeared shockingly quick and this is a cause for concern because I find it takes time to thoroughly read a scientific paper of this complexity.”
    JACK HEINEMANNThe reaction appears shockingly quick. It takes time to thoroughly read a scientific paper of this complexity
    — JACK HEINEMANN, PROFESSOR OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND GENETICS, UNIVERSITY OF CANTERBURY, NEW ZEALAND
    While most of the criticism was of a general nature, others were specific, referring to the type of rat used, the kind of statistical analysis, and the interpretation of the response to increasing concentrations of the agrichemicals, Roundup, or GM plant ingredient. But here, too, a review of the seven studies of this kind since 2004 shows that all of these used approximately the same number of rats and all were conducted on the same kind of rat (Sprague Dawley) as the study by Seralini’s team. “The 2004 study by Hammond (Monsanto’s) used marginally more rats in the relevant control group, but was in my opinion less powerful statistically because of the inclusion of ‘reference’ control lines that were not fed on the near-isogenic non-GM diet,” says Heinemann who heads the independent Centre for Integrated Research in Biosafety.
    But the voices of reason have been few in this current controversy which has redrawn ever more sharply the battle lines in the GM controversy. In the US, the Council for Biotechnology Information, which speaks for the industry, describes the paper as “a bizarre study by French researchers”. It has put out a statement, among others, by Bruce M Chassy, professor emeritus of food science at the University of Illinois, as saying: “It is a well-planned and cleverly orchestrated media event. The study was designed to produce exactly what was observed and it was deliberately allowed to continue until grotesque and fear-evoking tumors developed.”
    A clearly annoyed Seralini points out that to get official approval for commercialisation of NK603, Monsanto studied just 10 rats per group and used the same kind of rats. “If 10 rats is too small a number per group to reach a conclusion on safety like some of my critics are saying then NK603 and most agricultural GMOs should be forbidden.”
    But while scientists are involved in increasingly acrimonious exchanges, governments have acted. Russia, for one, has temporarily suspended the import and sales of NK603 maize until the country is reassured about its safety, the consumer safety watchdog Rospotrebnadzor announced within days of the paper’s publication. It asked scientists at Russia’s Institute of Nutrition to review the study by Seralini et al and sought the comments of the European Commission on it.
    France, for its part, ordered its food-safety agency Anses to quickly review the study and the Prime Minister pushed up the ante by declaring that his government would seek an immediate ban on the EU imports of the Monsanto product if the study’s findings were found conclusive. He put the scientific validation on fast track, demanding “a fast procedure, about a few weeks, to verify the scientific value of the study”.
    India is interestingly poised in this controversy. Two years ago, the regulator of the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee gave permission to Monsanto India to conduct bio-safety research trials (second year field trial) on two GM maize hybrids: Hishell and 900M Gold containing stacked events MON 89034 & NK603 at several state agricultural universities. Those trials are over and the company is reportedly awaiting approval for commercial release. Is the regulator taking note of the global uproar over the latest toxicological study?

    Source: http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/gm-maize-rats#sthash.svbCr3Gl.gbpl

    Tuesday, October 30, 2012

    Science not clear yet on GM crops: Jaipal Reddy

    Press Trust of India

    October 29, 2012
    New Delhi: Newly-appointed Science and Technology Minister S Jaipal Reddy today said science was not clear yet on the issue of GM crops and it should not be treated as an ideological issue.

    "I think the problem of GM crops is under discussion at the global level. Scientific consensus has not finally emerged. Debate is on at a global level. Science is not clear yet," he told reporters here.

    He said a panel of experts appointed by the Supreme Court had submitted an interim report on GM crops to the apex court recently.

    "I don't think it should be treated as an ideological issue but as a scientific issue... The ministry requires more time to study the interim report," Reddy said, adding that he was not in a position to give a final view on an interim report.

    His remarks come in the wake of a statement earlier this month by Scientific Advisory Committee to the Prime Minister, headed by eminent scientist C N R Rao, favouring introduction of GM crops.

    The science panel had argued that technology had potential to transform Indian agriculture.

    The SAC-PM had underscored the need to improve the regulatory structure on genetically modified farm produce.

    Reddy said Indian science was at an advanced stage to engage and participate in the global debate on the issue.

    A raging debate is on within and outside the Supreme Court on the safety and efficacy of GM crops with scientists pitted in favour and against transgenic food.

    Anti-GM crops activists have launched a shrill campaign to push for a ban on genetically modified crops and the issue is before the Supreme Court.

    SOURCE : http://www.business-standard.com/generalnews/news/science-not-clear-yetgm-crops-jaipal-reddy/73893/

    Thursday, October 25, 2012

    WATCH : Do we really need industrial agriculture to feed the world?



    Anna Lappé & Food MythBusters -- Do we really need industrial agriculture to feed the world? - YouTube

    Published on Oct 24, 2012
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    How can we feed the world—today and tomorrow?

    The biggest players in the food industry—from pesticide pushers to fertilizer makers to food processors and manufacturers—spend billions of dollars every year not selling food, but selling the idea that we need their products to feed the world. But, do we really need industrial agriculture to feed the world? Can sustainably grown food deliver the quantity and quality we need—today and in the future? Our first Food MythBusters film takes on these questions in under seven minutes. So next time you hear them, you can too.

    Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uem2ceZMxYk