Bizarre Advice To Editors from NZ Science Media Centre
Bizarre Advice To Editors from NZ Science Media
Centre
The publicly-funded NZ Science Media Centre is
offering bizarre suggestions to news editors and journalists
about how to report the accidental spread of GE canola in
Australia and the US.
The SMC advises that science
reporters should talk about GE canola "brightening the
roadsides with yellow during their flowering," and to report
that the latest research paper "is unremarkable and not at
all surprising."
The SMC media advice comes at the
same time as publication of research confirming the spread
of GE crops and herbicide-resistance into the US
environment.
Rather than advising the media of
scientific uncertainty and debate about the implications of
GE crops spreading, the SMC advises media to say that
contamination had happened before and was just being
"repeated now in the US state of North Dakota."
In
Australia contamination from GE canola has ended up with
farmers in court, and Western Australian growers are being
asked to stop growing GM Canola by grain exporters.
New Zealand farmers are also alarmed at the risk to
exports and local cropping from GE maize and GE wheat.There
is concern that Monsanto may attempt to enforce the
introduction of GE seeds through trade agreements like the
TPPA.
The spin being pushed by the New Zealand Science
Media Centre cannot be taken seriously when it deliberately
ignores the scientific debate, and fails to consider the
economic implications of GE contamination for New Zealand's
clean-green image and global exports.
The SMC does
not mention that increased use of toxic chemicals in the
environment is being directly blamed on growing herbicide
resistance in weeds and in GM crops. By ignoring this and
instead advising journalists with PR spin that "herbicide
resistance in canola is of no consequence if the canola is
not sprayed," the SMC is dismally failing to provide the
media with a credible perspective on scientific issues
having claimed until now that this was its purpose and
mission.
ENDS
REFERENCES
[http://www.sciencemediacentre.co.nz/2011/10/07/wild-gm-canola-in-united-states/]