GM Discussion - NZ Edition : October 28, 2003
GM Discussion - NZ Edition : October 28, 2003
1. Bakery
victim of anti-GM politics
2. Greenpeace denies creating
food scare
3. Who bears the liability now?
4. Business
as usual for Subway Sandwiches
5. Breadmaker awaits
Japanese approval of enzyme
6. Last-resort protest ends
in arrests
7. Farmers support end of GM moratorium
8.
Maori perspectives on GM vary
9. Maori consulted over GM
projects
10. Sconz argues against GM subsidies
11.
Biotenz News Update - 24 October 2003
Bakery victim of
anti-GM politics
Taranaki bakery Yarrows, involved in an
international genetic engineering (GE) scare, says it is the
victim of politicking. More than 90 Subway stores in Japan
stopped selling sandwiches on Friday...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5121
Greenpeace
denies creating food scare
Greenpeace spokesperson Steve
Abel said today that the Environment Minister's attempt to
blame Greenpeace for the latest Japanese GE incident was
"totally bizarre."On the Stuff news website
today,...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5122
Who
bears the liability now?
The major question to arise from
the weekend’s false food scare in New Zealand is; who will
bear the liability for the damage done to Yarrow’s and
Subway’s businesses, the Chairman of the Life
Science...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5119
Business
as usual for Subway Sandwiches
Hungry Christchurch people
are tucking into Subway sandwiches unperturbed by a Japanese
scare over genetic engineering, the Christchurch Press
reports. Subway outlets across Japan stopped selling
...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5114
Breadmaker
awaits Japanese approval of enzyme
Yarrows Bakery is
waiting to see whether authorities in Japan will approve a
GM enzyme found in bread dough it has been exporting.
Japan's Subway fast-food chain found the enzyme in dough
made by ...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5111
Last-resort
protest ends in arrests
Several genetic engineering (GE)
protesters were arrested at Parliament today after they
refused to leave. Protesters set up about 15 tents on
Parliament grounds yesterday after earlier being
aske...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5126
Farmers
support end of GM moratorium
Federated Farmers of New
Zealand (Inc) supports the end of a two-year moratorium on
applications for the commercial release of genetically
modified organisms (GMOs), said the federation's GM
spokesman...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5125
Maori
perspectives on GM vary
Many Maori object to GE - but the
opposition is far from black and white, reports Phillippa
Jamieson. "What happens when you transplant a Pakeha heart
into a Maori?" asks writer and academic
Rangi...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5124
Maori
consulted over GM projects
A Te Arawa elder has endorsed
research aimed at producing a genetically modified pine tree
- but Auckland's Ngati Whatua people are not so sure. Ben
Hona, a kaumatua of Rotorua's Ngati Whakaue
peo...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5117
Sconz
argues against GM subsidies
Government has approved new
blanket subsidies for GM developers that complete the cradle
to the grave state assistance programme for GMOs, said
Sustainability Council Executive Director Simon Terry.
...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5109
Biotenz
News Update - 24 October 2003
The latest issue of Biotenz
News Update has been posted to the Biotenz website
Index:Adding Value to Our Bio-EconomyNZTE 2004 Export
AwardsRemindersWaikato University PhD
Scholarships...
More...
http://www.lifesciencesnetwork.com/news-detail.asp?newsID=5108
From the LSN news team
Francis Wevers - Executive
Director
Christine Ross - Communications Assistant,
Wellington