Fonterra Threatened by Plan for GE Cows
Fonterra Threatened by Plan for GE Cows - 12
December 2007
Plans by AgResearch to expand it's
experimental herd of transgenic cows are a threat to the
international reputation of Fonterra and other New Zealand
brands trading off our clean and natural
image.
AgResearch has previously farmed on 100
acres deemed 'in containment', but news of its
latest application for GE cattle expansion into new
sites raises the spectre of undermining New Zealand's
trading reputation.
Consumers locally and
internationally continue to widely reject GE foods and
trust New Zealand products to be GE-free.
"It is
very poor management of our brand image to be pushing GE
cows when one of the major macro-trends in global food
marketing is for natural and sustainable production
methods," says Jon Carapiet from GE Free NZ in food and
environment.
"There is a real risk to Fonterra's
reputation from an expansion of GE experimental cattle. New
Zealand's biotechnology strategy should focus on natural
selection and marker assisted breeding that can achieve new
products and improvements without genetically engineering
the animals.
"This change in strategy is necessary
to fit with New Zealand's brand image; our scientists
have already successfully used these techniques in
developing sheep with natural resistance to facial eczema,
and in breeding dairy cows to produce superior
milk."
Fonterra should oppose the expansion and
distance itself from AgResearch's proposals. Instead they
should refocus investment to develop improved organic and
other premium natural products that will lift New Zealand
products above commodity-status.
If approved,
AgResearch's expanded herd of genetically engineered cattle
and GE goats will nominally be "in containment" but the
expansion points towards what may be in effect
"conditional release''.
As well as the risk to New
Zealand's trading image overseas, there is also a
biosecurity risk. Even though GE animals have been
continuously farmed in field development conditions for
seven years, there is virtually no
peer-reviewed published research on their effects to date
and over the long-term. A previous trial of over 3000 GE
sheep was terminated with all the animals destroyed and with
no scientific research conducted on either the animals or
the soil where they had
grazed.
ENDS
REFERENCES:
AgResearch
application to amend controls under s67A, GMF 98009 part I
&II (2007)
ERMA s67A amendment to allow the import
of lactoferrin embryos www.ermanz.govt.nz
ERMA GMD
02028 Annual reports 2004-2006
www.ermanz.govt.nz
ERMA GMF 98009 Annual reports
2001 -2006 www.ermanz.govt.nz
Background Note
To
date no transgenic drug from milk has been approved for oral
ingestion. Most such milk-derived products have failed
because of immune system reactions and deterioration in the
conditions being treated. The most famous reaction to
a genetically engineered drug was during the trial of an
arthritis drug that caused severe immune reaction
permanently impairing the health of the
subjects.
ends