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August 11, 2023 Big Food Views

Big Food

‘Gateway to Corporate Control’: Big Ag’s Push for New-Generation GMO Foods Has Nothing to Do With Food Security

According to a new report by Navdanya International, there is little reason to believe the new era of genetically modified organisms will be any different, considering the devastating consequences already caused by the industrial food system, pushed through the same false promises of food security, sustainability and climate adaptation.

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A new report by Navdanya International investigates the strategies of the agribusiness industry behind a new generation of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), created through gene editing.

On July 5, the European Commission released a proposal to exclude a large part of organisms genetically modified through new genetic editing techniques, from existing GMO regulations that require traceability, labeling and risk assessment for genetic engineering products.

What is really at stake? Why is agribusiness investing billions in this sector and lobbying European politicians?

Are “New GMOs” really new and as safe as the industry claims or should an independent investigation be undertaken following the European precautionary principle?

What will happen to the growing organic market and to our biodiversity after this irreversible choice? Is our food and seed sovereignty under threat?

The Navdanya International report “Nothing New in New GMOs” reveals:

  • The so-called gene technologies are nothing more than second-generation GMOs. Policymakers and corporations are using terms like “science-driven policy,” and “scientifically-based technical decision making,” which attempt to give a scientific and moral high ground to highly risky technologies, by elevating these technologies above nature, ecosystem functions and the purview of farmers’ contributions.
  • The advent of these new technologies is only allowing companies to widen patentable material. Biotech enthusiasts see this new economic sector as the panacea that could solve all our ecological, climate, biodiversity, health and economic crises. Thanks to gene editing technology they can now mobilize a previously inaccessible part of nature to produce economic output for their benefit.
  • Limited and controlled lab-based data is chosen as evidence of success and innovation that are then proposed as solutions to global threats. Establishing all knowledge, except the industry-funded scientific knowledge, as irrelevant to the promotion of sustainable agriculture enables the industry to control the narrative of the “right and appropriate” solution.
  • Lobby groups have started to move to change overall regulations on labeling GMOs. Labels such as “Organic” and “GMO-free labeling” would disappear in favor of “healthy” or “sustainable” labels, regardless of the process used to create the product. In the wake of several countries now having legislation to label the presence of GMO ingredients in foods, interest groups are seeking ways to bypass or change these labels to better market their biotech products.
  • The lack of traceability of gene-edited organisms, and the roping off of genetic material, puts into direct threat the survival of organic and agroecological agriculture, along with traditional and native agro diversity. This represents a further attack on food sovereignty, understood as the fundamental right of people to healthy and safe food produced by ecological methods and to adequate information on the origin and production methods of food.
  • Cross-contamination could be potentially unknown. Any genetic mayhem or destruction that could happen due to an altered organism could quickly pass on to a wild or conventional counterpart. Leading to a domino effect of possible consequences.
  • The same narratives that were used in the 1990s for the imposition of the first generation of GMOs are now being used to execute this deregulation. It is a series of false promises: the promise of increased climate sustainability, increased yield for greater food security, pest resistance, greater health and so on, that have all, with time, been proven completely false.

Conclusions

Considering the devastating consequences already caused by the industrial food system, pushed through the same false promises of food security, sustainability and climate adaptation, there is little reason to believe this new era of gene-edited organisms will be any different.

Food systems are deeply intertwined with natural systems, as well as with culture and local economies. The attempt to erase the ways in which food is produced is a play to erase the consequences of this industrial paradigm.

In order to maintain business as usual and not lose profit by allowing the real solutions to come to the forefront, a new iteration of the same failed technologies are being pushed globally.

New gene editing technologies continue to shift attention away from these real alternatives that can drive ecological regeneration. Now it is more important than ever to protect our food and seed sovereignty.

To demand that our democratic governments actually listen to the will of the people, and protect farmers and citizens from the risks of these new technologies, as well as hold corporations responsible for the destruction they’ve caused.

The real solutions lie in the creation of ecologically integrated systems based on biodiversity, care and a science that understands and respects the interconnections between life and nature.

Originally published by Navdanya International

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