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Biotech / Medical : Monsanto Co. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dan Spillane who wrote (2289)7/16/1999 8:55:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Respond to of 2539
 
Public Distrust May Halt Next Phase of Genetically Altered Food Production

Agriculture: Europeans are more leery of the new technology than are
Americans, according to study published in Science.

By PAUL JACOBS, Times Staff Writer
Friday, July 16, 1999

A new wave of genetically engineered crops
could bring about a revolution in food
production to feed a growing world population, but
public distrust and a movement to ban the foods
threaten to stop the new technology in its tracks,
according to research published in Thursday's
edition of the journal Science.

In a survey of consumer attitudes, the
researchers probed a growing fear of genetically
engineered foods, particularly in Europe, where
several supermarket chains, responding to public
distrust, have pledged to rid their shelves of the first
generation of such products.

In contrast, U.S. consumers have generally
accepted the altered crops. A majority of the
soybeans and a substantial share of the corn
planted this year contain genes from other species,
such as bacteria.

The difference in attitudes underlies growing
trade tensions across the Atlantic. A number of
European governments have called for labeling,
and the issue could become the center of another
food-based trade dispute. Earlier this year, the
U.S. said it would impose sanctions on European goods because of a
ban on beef from cattle fed hormones.

Why the divergence in attitudes?

Americans are more ignorant of the science, get less news about the
issue and are more trusting of government regulators than their European
counterparts, conclude researchers at the London School of Economics
and London's Science Museum who conducted public opinion surveys
in 1996 and 1997 in the U.S. and 17 European countries.

Europeans may see genetically modified food as "menacing" because
of a variety of scares in Europe--including a 1996 outbreak among
humans of mad cow disease traced to British beef. And they are less
likely to trust their countries' regulatory agencies than they are
environmental groups, which have led protests against genetically
engineered crops.

Americans, however, indicated much confidence in U.S. regulatory
bodies that have declared biotech foods safe--84% of respondents said
they had at least some confidence in the Food and Drug Administration
and 90% in the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The researchers also cite cultural differences. A number of scientists
said in interviews that Americans are quicker to embrace change in the
name of progress and are less wedded to traditional farming.

The findings in Science describe new techniques in biotechnology
that allow an increase in the nutritional properties of common foods by
taking genes from one species and implanting them in another.

American farmers have already embraced the first wave of products,
mostly changes in a single gene, producing plants that contain their own
pesticides or survive weedkiller.

Scientists are reporting success in more complicated genetic
transformations that alter the quality of the finished food products
themselves, boosting the protein content of grains, improving vegetable
oil quality and introducing nutrients that may prevent disease. In
developing countries, agricultural biotechnology could result in crops that
can be grown on marginal-quality land.

With an eye toward what has happened in Europe, the biotechnology
industry has gone on the offensive--pointing out the benefits of the
genetically engineered crops and rebutting safety issues raised by some
critics.

The Biotechnology Industry Organization--the industry's trade and
lobbying voice in the U.S.--this week unveiled a 100-page report on the
benefits of corn, cotton and potato varieties that contain bacterial genes
for natural insecticides. The industry report, prepared by the nonprofit
National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy, concludes that such
crops can reduce the use of conventional pesticides and increase yield
per acre.

But results have varied since 1996, when the genetically modified
crops were introduced. And some growers and seed producers have
been backing away from the genetically engineered seeds because the
crops are not accepted in Europe, said Libby Mikesell, a Biotechnology
Industry Organization spokeswoman.

Earlier this week, Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman defended the
U.S. regulatory review that has led to the approval of about 50
genetically altered plant varieties. Acknowledging growing consumer
distrust, however, he announced that he would establish an independent
scientific review of biotech plants and genetically modified livestock.
Glickman seemed to accept the inevitability of some kind of labeling of
genetically modified products, though, a position opposed by the
industry.

Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved

latimes.com:80/excite/990716/t000063436.html