SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Biotech / Medical : Monsanto Co. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dan Spillane who wrote (1698)3/18/1999 3:51:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2539
 
03/18 15:30 Brazil state threatens to destroy Monsanto soy

By Phil Stewart

SAO PAULO, March 18 (Reuters) - Brazil's major soybean producing
state of Rio Grande do Sul is threatening to destroy
genetically-modified soybeans grown on a test plot by the local unit of
U.S. biotechnology giant Monsanto Co. <MTC.N>.

"The soybean area will be destroyed by the end of the month if they
continue in violation of state law," the state's Agriculture Secretary
Jose Hermeto Hoffamann told Reuters.

Rio Grande do Sul, which aims to sell soybeans to European
consumers opposed to transgenics, accused the multinational of
breaking a new, March 3 state law by failing to provide an
environmental risk analysis for the 435-hectare test plot.

Hoffamann said Monsanto was reproducing enough seeds on the
land to cover all of Rio Grande do Sul sales in anticipation of the
federal government's expected final approval for planting of
Monsanto's herbicide-resistant Roundup Ready soybeans in the
coming months.

Securing the environmental analysis before the end-March deadline
may not be possible, he added.

"It will be very difficult for (Monsanto) to gather this information in time
because it take some time to collect this kind of data," Hoffamann
said.

Monsanto says it aims to complete the paperwork, but failing that, it
will take legal measures to protect its seeds.

"We will attempt to present the documents," said Rodrigo Lopes
Almeida, Monsanto do Brasil's corporate affairs director. "Monsanto
will defend itself within the parameters of the law."

Rio Grande do Sul is expected to turn out 22 percent of the country's
30.92-million-tonne crop -- the world's largest behind the United
States.

Brazil broke its ban on transgenics last September by approving the
safety of Monsanto's genetically-modifiedsoybeans, legally allowing
them to be treated like any other crop in the registration process.

Hoffamann said in an earlier interview that the state was seeking
legal means to ban all transgenic crops before their registration. He
added that the German joint venture AgrEvo had also been warned
about the new state law and its effect on the company's test plots of
transgenic corn and rice.

"They have also been told they must provide these documents,"
Hoffamann said.

Andre Abreu, who head's AgrEvo's biotechnology program in Brazil,
said that it would be very difficult to provide an environmental risk
analysis before the deadline. He also scoffed at the controversy over
the test plots, which he said totaled less than two hectares and
already had federal approval.

"All this fuss over nothing," Abreu said, adding the company had
already waded through a four-month assessment with the federal
government just to begin its research in Brazil.

"We think we have rights to keep (the plots) going and to conclude
this research and to have fair time to comply with these demands," he
told Reuters.

AgrEvo is an agrochemical joint venture between Germany's Hoechst
AG <HOEG.F> and Schering AG <SCHG.F>.



To: Dan Spillane who wrote (1698)3/18/1999 3:56:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2539
 
Analysts comments re. the Zeneca/Monsanto agreement:

''The companies save legal expenses, and it opens up the
market a little bit because farmers will now be able to use
either Touchdown or Roundup on Roundup Ready seeds,'' said Fred
Siemer, an independent analyst in New York.

''This is basically a compromise that allows both companies
to avoid further court action,'' said Steve Abbott, an analyst at
Credit Lyonnais Securities in London.

Monsanto said sales for Roundup increased by 25 percent in
1998 from a year earlier. Abbott estimated that Roundup generated
about a quarter of Monsanto's $8.6 billion in 1998 sales.

''It allows Monsanto to further leverage its Roundup
technology before the patent expires,'' said Siemer.

news.com