October 19, 2007
How Did Genetically Engineered Rice Contaminate The US Rice Supply?
Back in December, I made a couple of posts (here and here) about how the USDA had ignored the public’s opinion and approved a genetically engineered strain of rice that had previously somehow escaped from test plots run by Bayer CropScience and contaminated the US rice supply.
Well, on Oct 5, the USDA released their conclusions regarding how the genetically engineered rice had escaped. Or should I say, their lack of conclusions. They ended the investigation, which took over 8500 staff hours and visits to 45 locations in 11 states and Puerto Rico with the admission that they don’t know what happened.
Supposedly “missing records” are the culprit here. But the USDA will take no action against Bayer. It’s obvious that the USDA feels their job is to accomodate the companies who experiment with these genetically engineered organisms, rather than to protect the public, farmers, and the food supply from errors and accidents. This is just a sampling of what’s going to happen if the USDA doesn’t come up with and enforce some strict new guidelines for GE crops.
This time, the price was “merely” a tremendous economic loss for rice growers and exporters, because other nations closed their borders when what had happened became known. Next time an experimental GE crop contaminates our food supply, we may not be so lucky. They don’t call them “Frankenfoods” for nothing.
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