More nails in the GM coffin — bye bye BASF / amaranth fights back against GM menace / Take the Flour Back

18 Jan­u­ary 2012

BASF, the last firm still devel­op­ing genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied crops in Ger­many is stop­ping its work, admit­ting defeat in the face of wide­spread Euro­pean oppo­si­tion to to the idea.

18 Jan­u­ary 2012

BASF, the last firm still devel­op­ing genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied crops in Ger­many is stop­ping its work, admit­ting defeat in the face of wide­spread Euro­pean oppo­si­tion to to the idea.

This fol­lows deci­sions by Bay­er and Syn­gen­ta to stop their genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied (GM) crop work in Ger­many over the last few years.

Ger­man chem­i­cal giant BASF has announced that it will halt the devel­op­ment or com­mer­cial­i­sa­tion of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied (GM) crops in Europe, and move its biotech R&D oper­a­tions to the US. The firm cit­ed con­sumer and polit­i­cal resis­tance to trans­genic plants in Europe for its deci­sion. 

BASF will now con­cen­trate its plant biotech­nol­o­gy activ­i­ties in North and South Amer­i­ca, and the head­quar­ters of BASF Plant Sci­ence will be moved from Lim­burg­er­hof, Ger­many, to Raleigh, North Car­oli­na, US. BASF expects that this will result in the loss of 140 jobs in Europe.

‘We are con­vinced that plant biotech­nol­o­gy is a key tech­nol­o­gy for the 21st cen­tu­ry,’ said Ste­fan Mar­ci­nows­ki, a mem­ber of BAS­F’s exec­u­tive board. ‘How­ev­er, there is still a lack of accep­tance for this tech­nol­o­gy in many parts of Europe — from the major­i­ty of con­sumers, farm­ers and politi­cians. There­fore, it does not make busi­ness sense to con­tin­ue invest­ing in prod­ucts exclu­sive­ly for cul­ti­va­tion in this mar­ket.’ 

BAS­F’s deci­sion was met with warn­ings from indus­try rep­re­sen­ta­tives and lob­by­ists, but cel­e­bra­tion by oth­ers, includ­ing envi­ron­men­tal advo­cates and at least one for­mer indus­try insid­er. 

Present­ly, only two GM crops are autho­rised for cul­ti­va­tion in the EU: MON810 maize, made by US-based Mon­san­to, and BAS­F’s Amflo­ra pota­to. MON810 is only approved for sale as an ani­mal feed and starch from Amflo­ra is used in indus­tri­al process­es.

Mau­rice Moloney, the chief exec­u­tive of Rotham­st­ed Research in the UK, which has been engaged in GM work, said that mov­ing the focus of crop sci­ence even fur­ther away from Europe is ‘deeply regret­table’. Such a move will ‘make inno­v­a­tive new tech­nolo­gies, includ­ing but not lim­it­ed to GM, less avail­able to Euro­pean pro­duc­ers and con­sumers and car­ries the risk of deny­ing them access to crops and foods with health and envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits,’ he added. 

BAS­F’s deci­sion is like­ly to adverse­ly affect Europe’s eco­nom­ic growth and food sup­ply, Moloney warned. ‘It is iron­ic that much of the sci­ence that cre­at­ed mod­ern biotech­nol­o­gy came from Europe and yet Euro­peans have been deprived of the envi­ron­men­tal ben­e­fits such as the reduc­tion of the use of pes­ti­cides and improved soil qual­i­ty as well as the more obvi­ous eco­nom­ic ben­e­fits of cheap­er food and agri­cul­tur­al prod­ucts,’ he said. 

In addi­tion, Alan Dewar, an inde­pen­dent ento­mol­o­gist who directs Dewar Crop Pro­tec­tion and used to be head of ento­mol­o­gy at a divi­sion of Rotham­st­ed Research, called BAS­F’s deci­sion to quit Europe ‘indica­tive of the ever increas­ing iso­la­tion that Euro­pean sci­en­tists find them­selves in’. Dewar high­light­ed ‘inad­e­quate sen­tences’ hand­ed down by judges in sev­er­al Euro­pean coun­tries to pro­tes­tors who have been ‘caught red-hand­ed’ destroy­ing GM field tri­als, say­ing it is not sur­pris­ing that biotech crop research has stalled in Europe. 

But Igna­cio Chapela, a micro­bial ecol­o­gy pro­fes­sor at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Berke­ley and senior researcher with the Cen­tre for Biosafe­ty in Nor­way, says that genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied organ­isms have been over­hyped and that the indus­try needs to be sig­nif­i­cant­ly trimmed down. 

‘The size of the GMO mar­ket should be much small­er, but it is being pro­mot­ed very strong­ly with the full force of the US gov­ern­ment,’ Chapela says, who for­mer­ly worked for Swiss firm San­doz, Sygen­ta’s pre­de­ces­sor, devel­op­ing new agri­chem­i­cals. He says much pub­li­cised claims that GM crops would cut lev­els of her­bi­cides and insec­ti­cides in the food chain have failed to mate­ri­alise and, in fact, many of these prod­ucts have led to more of both. 

The envi­ron­men­tal group Friends of the Earth (FoE) Europe also cel­e­brat­ed BAS­F’s announce­ment. ‘This is anoth­er nail in the cof­fin for genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied foods in Europe,’ said Adri­an Bebb, agro­fu­els cam­paign coor­di­na­tor for FoE Europe. ‘This is a good day for con­sumers and farm­ers and opens the door for the Euro­pean Union to shift Europe to green­er and more pub­licly accept­able farm­ing.’

How­ev­er, is this a real vic­to­ry or a sleight of hand?  Read more

——

Ama­ranth, the Inca sacred plant, attacks GM soya crop

5,000 hectares trashed, 50,000 threat­ened! 

It first hap­pened in 2004, when a farmer in Atlanta in the US found ama­ranth that had spread to his fields was resis­tant to Roundup — the her­bi­cide much GM was bred to resist.  But since then, the ‘weed’ has spread wide­ly, and accord­ing to the UK’s Cen­tre for Ecol­o­gy and Hydrol­o­gy there has been gene trans­fer. 

[note: this is an old arti­cle, excerpt tak­en from here.  There have been a rash recent­ly of arti­cles about GM repost­ed from the last years, that pur­port to be from 2012; this arti­cle about ama­ranth was not pre­vi­ous­ly cov­ered on this site, hence it’s brief repost­ing]

——

Past action against BAS­F’s UK HQ

Future action this May against GM wheat tri­al