|
Government
Too Slow to Protect Against GM Maize
Press Release: Sustainability Council
of New Zealand
August 9
2002
"Government is shown to have again acted
too late in the face of a clear exposure to GM contamination"
said Sustainability Council Executive Director, Simon Terry.
"It was only 8 days ago that government
set in place biosecurity measures for maize seed imports.
Yet GM maize has been a commercial crop in the US for over
five years and seed from the US was last year the dominant
source of supply to New Zealand."
"Government moved too slowly to get
a robust regime in place for sweetcorn after the November
2000 corn contamination incident. An interim regime was tightened
only as of last week."
"The potential for contamination from
maize seed was just as strong at the time of that first incident
two years ago and yet no action was taken to protect against
GM maize contamination until last week" said Mr Terry.
"Maize seed was left completely untested in the meantime".
The new regime for maize and sweetcorn has
raised the sample size considerably to (3200 seeds) from that
used under the interim regime. It is understood that the voluntary
testing of the seed used to grow the crop that will be destroyed
used a sample size of only 1400 seeds.
"The higher sample size for the regime
now in place should provide much better protection. However,
we may well need to undertake additional random testing for
a period until we can be sure this new system is adequate."
"If at any stage it is found that testing
regimes are not providing the required level of protection,
then the fallback option is to strongly discourage seed imports
from the four countries that account for 99% of all GM crop
production. This would cover only seeds that have GM equivalents."
"Such measures should include making
the importer strictly liable for any damages resulting from
contamination" he said.
"Government got the communication right
this time. But the failure to act two years ago has left us
with what looks like a contaminated crop now.
Contact Details:
Simon Terry 025-444-678, 04-913-3655
www.sustainabilitynz.org
back to news index
|