20 Oct 1998
The survey reveals that most customers from all the leading supermarkets are opposed to the stocking of food containing GM ingredients. Objections to GM ingredients for customers of each chain were:
Marks & Spencers:65 % Somerfield: 63 % Safeway: 61%
Sainsbury's: 60% Tesco: 60 % Asda: 56%
Co-op: 56 % Morrison's: 54 % Kwiksave : 53 %
Pete Riley, Food Campaigner at Friends of the Earth said:
The message is coming across loud and clear: the public do not want genetically modified food or crops in this country. Supermarkets claim to listen to their customers, well their customers have now spoken. It is not enough to simply label products containing GM ingredients. They should banish these Frankenstein foods from their shelves as soon as possible.
FOE are pressing all retailers and manufacturers to go completely GM free.
ENDS
Notes
1. The FOE poll was carried out by NOP on 2nd-4th/ 6th-7th October 1998 by telephone. Respondents were asked which supermarket they shopped at and Genetically modified food comes from crops modified to be resistant to insects and weedkillers and to help food processing. Do you want your supermarket to sell genetically modified food or not?.
2. Iceland achieved GM-free status in May 1998. It took the company 18 months to source GM-free soya products from Canada and Brazil after the US industry failed to respond to consumer demand and separate GM and non-GM crops.
3. Early in 1998 Sainsbury's ran a customer ballot asking what they would like to see on their shelves. Eight out of the top ten answers were for organic products. The European regulation on organic certification excludes genetically engineered products and ingredients.
Contact details:
Friends of the Earth
26-28 Underwood St.
LONDON
N1 7JQ
Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html
Media team