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2-Plants: US Politicans Attack BIO's GMO Moratorium

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PART I

-------------------------------- GENET-news --------------------------------

TITLE: VILSACK, GROSS WEIGH IN ON BIOTECH DECISION

SOURCE: Associated Press, by Mike Glover

edited and sent by Agnet, Canada

DATE: Oct 24, 2002

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VILSACK, GROSS WEIGH IN ON BIOTECH DECISION

DES MOINES, Iowa - Gov. Tom Vilsack was cited as writing in a letter to the

Biotechnology Industry Organization that a decision by a biotechnical

industry group not to grow genetically engineered corn for pharmaceutical

purposes in states such as Iowa is "a dangerous precedent," adding that "I

feel this decision by for a pharma-crop ban is a knee-jerk reaction that is

not fully warranted by the scientific evidence." BIO was cited as saying

this week that its members had agreed not to grow pharmaceutical crops in

states where it could contaminate neighboring crops intended for human

consumption. That includes Iowa, and Vilsack reacted quickly, dashing off a

letter asking the group for a clarification of its policy. Vilsack was

quoted as saying, "I support food safety and security, but this decision

appears to be overreaching. It seems more like an effort to exclude the

nation's most productive farmers, small businesses and university

researchers from this emerging industry." Vilsack has said the state could

have a bright future in developing genetically engineered crops for the

pharmaceutical industry.

PART II

-------------------------------- GENET-news --------------------------------

TITLE: EDITORIAL: LIFT THE MORATORIUM A BIOTECH BLACKBALLING OF THE CORN

BELT IS BASED ON FEAR, NOT SCIENCE

SOURCE: Des Moines Register, USA, edited and sent by Agnet, Canada

DATE: Oct 25, 2002

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EDITORIAL: LIFT THE MORATORIUM A BIOTECH BLACKBALLING OF THE CORN BELT IS

BASED ON FEAR, NOT SCIENCE

Iowa must, according to this editorial, do all it can to persuade the

biotechnology industry to back away from its moratorium on planting corn

engineered for pharmaceutical or industrial uses in Midwestern states. The

editorial says that the voluntary ban is driven by fear, not science. It is

more sensible to assure exemplary safeguards are in place to prevent

contamination of corn grown for food than to take an incredible opportunity

away from an entire region.

The potential of drugs or chemicals extracted from gene-altered plants is

not entirely understood but it is likely huge. Some Iowa farmers stand to

benefit enormously by moving away from growing crops for animal feed to

growing plants designed to produce special proteins for different

commercial uses. Already being grown in Iowa is biotech corn that contains

an enzyme that helps people with cystic fibrosis digest food. Manufacturing

facilities to bring such products to market also could locate here. The

editorial says that the moratorium was issued because of concerns about

consumer confidence in the food supply, but with strict regulation and

ongoing research, fields can be safely isolated so that biotech crops do

not cross-pollinate with food crops.

Lisa Dry, spokeswoman for the Biotechnology Industry Organization,

explained that the organization's moratorium is not based on science. "We

did this because the grain handlers, the grocery manufacturers, the food

processors, the grain exporters have all begged us not to grow these

products in commodity corn," she said. "Because we have no track record in

this new area of pharmaceutical production, the only experience they have

to draw on is StarLink."

The editorial goes on to say it it is illogical to allow paranoia to

determine the role Iowa or any other state plays in the development of

biotechnology. Gov. Tom Vilsack sent a letter on Wednesday to the president

of the Biotechnology Industry Organization saying the decision was

"overreaching," that the "policy sets a dangerous precedent for the

regulation of other biotech varieties." He also asked for clarification of

the policy.

Senators Tom Harkin and Charles Grassley and the rest of Iowa's

congressional delegation should join Vilsack in making the very strong case

for reversing the moratorium. Grassley already is working with experts at

Iowa State University to do just that. Industry spokeswoman Dry left open

the possibility that the decision might at some point be re-examined. Iowa

officials and everyone else with a stake in biotechnology should make every

effort to see that it is.

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