GE Failures Threaten National Interest
“Restore Moratorium”: GE Failures Threaten National
Interest
16 April 08
A Moratorium on
applications to release GE organisms must be restored to
protect the National interest.
That is the only
reasonable course of action in light of a new report (1) by
Sustainable Future: A Review of the forty nine
recommendations of the Royal Commission on Genetic
Modification (2008).
The study reveals major
failures in the development of systems recommended by the
Royal Commission on GE to protect New
Zealand.
“Despite accepting the advice of the $6
million Royal Commission the ball has been dropped. The
gaps in regulation and strategic planning now seriously
threaten the economy, environment and community wellbeing of
New Zealand,” says Jon Carapiet from GE Free NZ (in food
and environment).
The independent audit of
post-RCGM responses shows the failures
include:
- Consumers are being left in
the dark despite promises to set up a GE-free labeling
regime to allow people to choose what they
eat
- The strategic threat to
conventional farming and exports
remains
- The regulatory authority ERMA
has no powers to ensure Research on negative effects of GE
is ever carried out
- Lack of planning
for GE-free zones and a national farm-management system,
means New Zealand faces the threat of civil conflict as
farmer fights farmers over liability for contamination and
lost exports
- Ethically-inappropriate
uses of food-animals as cheap ‘bio-rectors’ for
chemicals can continue despite being unacceptable to the
wider community
Only the so-called “People’s
Moratorium” - the outcome of massive public protests in
the early 2000’s which lead to some 70% of New Zealanders
demanding protection for a GE-free environment and food
production, is currently in place in New
Zealand.
To calm public unrest the government said
it accepted most of the Royal Commissions recommendations
and would take action. But of the 49 recommendations that
the RCGM put forward only 20 have been “Fully
implemented”, with 12 “partially” and 17 “not”
implemented.
“The Governments "pick and choose"
approach to the RCGM recommendations have significant
damaging impact on the intention of the RCGM to “proceed
with caution” that protect the New Zealand people and
commons,” says Claire Bleakley.
Serious failures
in the official response to the RCGM has also left it to
voluntary and public-interest community groups like GE Free
NZ (in food and environment) to act as watchdogs and raise
the alarm.
Recent High Court action (2) undertaken
against ERMA directly relates to The Royal Commission call
for research on the environmental impacts on soil ecosystems
to be required by ERMA (6.12).
“The tragedy is
that we have seen such groups as MADGE – acting in the
public interest in court– being crushed by vested
interests at the same time as officials are failing to do
what they should,” says Jon Carapiet.
“The
serious gaps in response to the Royal Commission are a
recipe for disaster and warrant the reinstatement of the
Moratorium
immediately.”
ENDS