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The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) runs inadequate safety checks on GMOs and just rubber stamps whatever the agro-chemical industry puts on the table. This process ignores the serious and unpredictable risks to human health and the environment.
The current risk assessment process contravenes EU law because it does not, among the other things, consider long-term impacts of GM crops. Recently the Austrian government commissioned a scientific study on the effects of a GM maize (to which EFSA gave the green light). The study revealed that the fertility of mice fed this type of maize was severely impaired compared with mice fed non-GM maize. This maize is authorised to enter the EU market to be used mainly in animal feed.
On the 4th of December
they have the chance to turn it around. The Ministers will be meeting to decide
how to reform the EU authorization system of GMOs.
We're asking them to:
We are urging the EU to keep our food safe. Learn more about GMO’s in Europe.
GMOs
are heavily promoted by the agro-biotech industry as the answer to the
so-called food crisis. But existing non-GM farming methods can make a real
difference in the developing world while at the same time being sustainable and
not threatening the environment or human health. The most significant cause of
starvation is not due to the lack of food production but the ineffective
distribution of food and the way it is traded.
In
contrast GMOs actually pose a major threat to food security due to their
adverse effects on biodiversity, their continuous contamination of conventional
crops and the monopoly of the global seeds market by big biotech corporations
like Monsanto. There is growing scientific evidence of the health and
environmental impacts of genetically modified crops. In addition to the recent
Austrian study, several other recently published peer-reviewed studies point to
numerous unexpected effects of GM cultivation.
Some
Ministers are already on our side (Austria,
Hungary, Greece, Luxembourg, France, Italy, Cyprus, Poland and
Lithuania) but many are
still sitting on the fence (Belgium,
Bulgaria, Denmark, Germany,
There
is a serious risk that ministers will agree only on minor 'cosmetic' changes to
the current assessment process. We can't afford to let this happen. The EU must
ensure food safety and security by agreeing on tight controls.