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Real Food

Real Food News

2003

15 January

GM beet research answers very few questions

New research on GM sugar beet, partly funded by Monsanto, will provide the Government with little new information on which to base crucial decisions on the commercialisation of GM crops.

The research, carried out in 1999 and 2000 at Brooms Barn Research Station in Hertfordshire, compared non-GM weed management with a new technique for GM sugar beet weed management which involved only spraying the rows of plants and leaving the gap between rows unsprayed. The weeds between the rows were sprayed later in the summer. The research team reported that GM sugar beet yield was potentially higher than under the conventional system and potentially produced more weeds, which they claim are beneficial to wildlife.

The research did not cover other key objections to GM sugar beet, including gene transfer or animal feed safety. Friends of the Earth has also identified a number of key weaknesses in the study:

Friends of the Earth Real Food and Farming Campaigner Pete Riley said: "This research tells us nothing about the impact of GM sugar beet on farmland birds, but shows that Monsanto is desperate to find a case for promoting GM seed. If it still has to sponsor research on how to manage their GM crops, it looks as though the public money spent on the farm scale trials has been wasted.

"Sugar beet farmers were sold the idea of GM crops in the mid 1990s on the basis that they were good for weed control and to produce clean ground. This research does not support that. And the techniques proposed are likely to be more costly and more trouble for farmers. Even if there was a market for GM sugar beet, it is hard to see what the appeal would be for the majority of farmers."

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