The
food industry is ramping up for a major battle to defeat a ballot
measure in California this fall that would require foods to be labeled
as “Genetically Engineered” if the product contains ingredients from
biotech products.
Pamela
Bailey, president and CEO of the Grocery Manufacturers Association
(GMA), told farmers from the American Soybean Association that defeating
the California labeling initiative “is the single-highest priority for
GMA this year.”
Californians
will vote on the “Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act” on the
November ballot. Bailey called the ballot measure “a serious, long term
threat to the viability of biotech in agriculture,” adding that it would
lead down a path similar to Europe where biotech crops are opposed and
face multiple barriers to production.
More labeling initiatives will happen or attempts at legislation if biotech supporters lose in California, Bailey said.
The
key driver in the California initiative is a “vocal, activist organic
movement” seeking to expand by causing consumers to question food
ingredients from genetically engineered crops. Social media also are
inflaming the effort, Bailey said, making it more difficult to confront.
“Labeling is not their ultimate objective,” she said.
“They want to limit biotech products.”
That’s
certainly an issue for farmers when roughly 94 percent of soybean and
88 percent of corn acres are planted with biotech varieties.
Ellen
Kullman, president and CEO of DuPont, told soybean growers the ballot
measure implies there are problems with biotech crops despite the
regulatory regime, safeguards and years of production and food
processing without any proven scientific problems. While farmers have
struggled to explain the benefits, a labeling campaign creates a
one-sided argument.
“That’s
not going in the right direction. The world really needs more food
productivity. The power of science can really get that done in a very
transparent way and scientific framework.
The
label would be required on foods with ingredients from genetically
engineered crops and would require “Genetically Engineered,” or “May be
partially produced by Genetically Engineered ingredients.” Along with
that, it would ban the term “natural,” or “naturally made” if the food
product is processed, which actually has nothing directly to do with
whether an ingredient comes from a biotech crop. If passed, the measure
would go into effect in July 2014.
Food
manufacturers stake their reputations on the safety of their products,
Bailey said, and don’t appreciate a label that would erroneously
question the safety of an ingredient. “Anything that implies their
products are not safe is a very serious concern,” Bailey said.
Further, Bailey said the initiative, if adopted, would effectively be regulated through litigation.
Attorneys would bring lawsuits challenging the ingredients and whether a product should be labeled.
The
ballot measure also has a host of exemptions, including food in
restaurants, dairy, meat and alcohol. Imported foods would be exempt as
well if they have a “GMO-free” declaration, Bailey said.
A
study by GMA cited that California consumers could end up paying as
much as $825 more per family annually because of the increased
segregation, ingredient substitution and record-keeping required under
the measure. Overall, industry and consumer costs would range from $8.2
billion to $10.7 billion, according to the GMA study (WHO conducted and paid for the study??-Clean Food Earth Woman).
In
polling, Bailey said Californians are uncomfortable over the exemptions
allowed under the proposition, as well as the potential higher costs.
Yet, as DTN reported last month, backers got more than 1 million
signatures in California to put the measure on the ballot.
Agricultural
and grocery interests have created Californians Against the Costly Food
Labeling Proposition to counter the ballot measure (Lobbyists and RENT A CROWDS- Clean Food Earth Woman). Bailey declined to
say how much the group expects to spend to defeat the proposition. The
groups also are looking at legal challenges should the proposition pass.
Groups
opposing the ballot measure got a boost last month when the American
Medical Association stated there was no scientific justification for
labeling food that has ingredients from genetically engineered crops. A
U.S. Senate vote last month that would allow states to label such foods
also failed.
Bailey
acknowledged the ballot fight in California highlights the problems of
trying to explain the benefits of biotechnology to average consumers (How can they EXPLAIN benefits that do not exist? - Clean Food Earth Woman).
Food companies and farm groups have failed to stress not only the safety
of such crops, but the other positive elements. “This is a topic all of our organizations are struggling with,” Bailey said. — Chris Clayton, DTN
Source: http://npaper-wehaa.com/wlj/2012/07/23/#?page=14&article=1632353
Source: http://npaper-wehaa.com/wlj/2012/07/23/#?page=14&article=1632353
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