This morning Greenpeace delivered five tonnes of Quebec-grown GE corn in front of the Quebec Liberal Party’s office in Montreal. By this action, Greenpeace reminds Quebec Liberals of its broken promises of 2003, as well as of the importance of the issues involving the mandatory labelling of GMOs or genetically modified organisms. On the heap of corn one could see many small posters reading: “GMOs — What they are they hiding from us — Monsanto 863 Corn, Monsanto LY038, etc.” With this gesture the environmental organisation reminds people of all the names of all the varieties of genetically engineered corn approved in Canada, which various governments involved are trying to keep out of public sight.
GMOs: we have a right to know
During the last provincial election, the three main parties did
all they could to dodge the GMO labelling issue, and obviously they
did not clearly commit themselves to labelling. Yet in no way does
it mean that the problems GMOs create suddenly vanished from our
radar screens. The new Liberal minority government
will have to give an answer to the overwhelming majority of
Quebeckers who are willing to know if what they eat contains GE
food.
In 2003 the Quebec Liberal Party and its leader, Premier Jean
Charest,
promised to enact GMOs mandatory labelling.
It is now known that the costs of such a measure
would not be that high. As a matter of fact, the Quebec
Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAPAQ) was given in
October 2006 an economic report stating that the costs involved
would not be as high as one might have expected, and that they were
lower in fact than what the industry proclaimed. Greenpeace and
other groups analysed this report, and then put forward concrete
solutions in order to finance such costs in case they materialised.
As for Parti Québécois, its leader André Boisclair promised to
"implement a management system that will enable us to trace our
food from farm to fork". ( Letter from André Boisclair to
Greenpeace, August 4 2006 Internet address site). Consequently, the
PQ's caucus and its leader should be able to support a motion in
favour of the labelling of GM food in Quebec since such a measure
would represent "the first prerequisite to inform the population
more efficiently." Eight PQ MNAs already signed Greenpeace's
statement requiring that all GE foods be labelled. They should be
able to support a similar Liberal bill or regulation. Greenpeace
demands that a precise timeline be set to fulfil that promise. We
demand that a GE food mandatory labelling draft regulation be
submitted at the Commission on Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
(CAFF) and adopted by the National Assembly by the end of 2007 at
the latest. Furthermore, in the light of the report submitted to
MAPAQ in which it was confirmed that the labelling costs were not
as high as what the agri-food processing industry pretended, we
demand that the new Liberal minority government legislate GE food
labelling.
As for Action démocratique du Québec, now the official
opposition, it refused to answer Greenpeace's questionaire during
the electoral campaign. Submitting a mandatory GE labelling draft
regulation would force those MNAs to state their opinion publicly
on a measure that between 80 and 95% of the people of Quebec
support.
To this day about forty countries have already implemented the
mandatory labelling of GE food, or they are on their way to do so.
(
See map on Greenpeace International website, pdf) If they can
do it, so can we. The obstacles are not technical in nature, they
are actually political. 'voluntary' labelling (left to the
discretion of the agri-food industry) as was adopted by the federal
government in April 2004 has until now not produced a single "with
GMO" label. In addition, the federal standard that sets a very high
threshold of 5% actually allows the industry to hide the majority
of food containing GMOs or produced from GM ingredients. Since the
Canadian Government is dragging its feet on this issue, the Quebec
government should immediately implement a mandatory labelling
system. Greenpeace strongly condemns the fact that no bill has been
filed and adopted yet.
GMOs traceability
In order to ensure the food we find on our groceries' shelves do
not contain GMOs, the most economical, practical and rigorous
strategy would be to make sure that none of the basic ingredients
used in processed food are GMO free. Consequently, we must
implement a traceability system in our food chain. Such a system
would be mainly based on every supplier's formal guarantees.
Independent laboratories would regularly test their claims. There
would be no need to check every product on the market since you
don't necessarily find traces of GMOs in it (e.g. canola oil).
Quebec could start by adopting labelling standards similar to those
found in Europe, with a traceability threshold of 0.9% above which
the labelling of GE food would be mandatory. Notice that this 0.9%
threshold applies to each ingredient taken individually and that
the GMO occurrence should be accidental and non-permanent.
Costs of labelling
The European experience showed that consumer retail prices did
not increase following mandatory labelling. Large European grocery
chains such as Safeway, Marks & Spencer and CWS Retail simply
reorganised their supplies in order to provide food free of
GMOs and as the same price as before, just as the vast majority
of their customers wanted it. The European Commissioner for Health
and Consumer Protection, Mr David Byrne, confirmed it when he
stated: "Some pretend that costs will have to increase
significantly because of labelling. We do not think it will be the
case. The current labelling system (based on DNA and protein) that
was proposed in 1997 did not push up costs despite the horrendous
forecasts put forward by some interest groups." Nevertheless, in
case a mandatory labelling system carried additional costs, one
should make sure that the farmers who farm without GMOs and the
consumers who don't want to find it on their plate are not the ones
footing the bill! Those who produce or use GMOs should be the ones
paying for it. Since the Monsanto Corporation is 90% responsible
for GE crops across the world, there is no reason why we should
indirectly subsidise this company by paying more for our food in
order to mop the costs of labelling. Greenpeace and other groups
have already made public a report made for Quebec's MAPAQ about GE
food labelling costs. If you study this report closely, you will
find that the labelling would not be as expensive as what the
industry claims.
Beyond the labelling issue
However, one should not be content to deal only with mandatory
labelling. The whole GE food issue must be debated by society. This
is why Greenpeace invites every citizen of Quebec to be present at
the hearings of the
Commission on Agriculture, Fisheries and Food.
Josh Brandon, a Greenpeace GMO campaigner from British Columbia, was in Montreal for the event.
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