[Vision2020] Avoiding Frankenfoods? Shop in Moscow.
lfalen
lfalen at turbonet.com
Mon Jun 25 11:15:47 PDT 2007
The concept of Frankenfoods is anti-science and anti-progress. Genetic engineering is no different than selective breeding. It just speeds uo the process. Genetic engineering is a great tool that is used to improve products and increase productivity. There is no danger from these products. Every new improvement has been opposed by unfounded fears. X-rays, irradiation of food, you name it. The biggest danger, may be all the additives and/ingredients that are in most processed foods to eople with various food allergies( Soy etc). This can be handled by reading the labels.
Roger
-----Original message-----
From: "Bill London" london at moscow.com
Date: Mon, 25 Jun 2007 10:48:44 -0700
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Avoiding Frankenfoods? Shop in Moscow.
> OK. So, this is an article about the Moscow in Russia....but it's still interesting...BL
>
> Want to be sure it's GM-free? Buy food in Moscow
> By James Kilner
> Reuters
> Posted: 2007-06-24 19:17:07
> MOSCOW (Reuters) - Moscow next week introduces a city-wide label to identify GM-free foods, a move ecologists hail as ground-breaking but which foreign producers say is complex and costly.
>
> A handful of individual food producers around the world already use labels certifying their food is free of genetically modified elements -- but this is the first large-scale political effort to introduce such a system, Greenpeace says, expecting it to be watched by others as a test-case.
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> "These labels are important for consumers so they know which companies keep a tight control on ingredients in their products," Greenpeace's GM researcher in Russia, Natalia Olefirenko, said.
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> After an official -- voluntary -- inspection producers will have the right to carry Moscow's GM-free label for a year.
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> The European Union already insists products which contain more than 0.9 percent of GM-enhanced ingredients must say so on the packet, but environmentalists argue that does not go far enough.
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> "It's very important for the rest of the world to watch Moscow," Olefirenko said.
>
> Greenpeace estimates around 80 percent of Russian produce contains no genetically enhanced ingredients, in line with other developing countries, against only about 20 percent in the EU and richer countries.
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> But Greenpeace said parts of the EU could follow Moscow's lead if it is a success, although the label should remain voluntary.
>
> Foreign food producers say that is just one of the problems the label brings.
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> Supermarkets eager to curry favour with Moscow's government have hinted they will only stock products carrying the GM-free label -- and signals from the authorities suggest the label will effectively be obligatory, producer lobby groups say.
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> "And it's all extra costs," said Alexei Popovichev, head of Rusbrand which represents big Western producers such as Nestle and Kraft. "It involves special testing, special packaging and the costs will be passed on to the consumer."
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> Small domestic producers will probably feel the burden of the extra costs hardest as they will not be able to spread them through economies of scale, he said.
>
> Western businesses also argue the GM-free label could mislead customers into buying poorer products because the assertion that foods contain no GM-ingredients could be misread as a signal that all the ingredients are of high-quality.
>
> ARGENTINIAN APPLES
>
> Greenpeace does warn there is a potential flaw in the Moscow GM label, saying the testing system chosen by Moscow is untried even though it says over $2 million has already been spent buying equipment for laboratories owned by a Moscow businessman.
>
> The project, an initiative of Moscow's 70-year-old Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, comes to a city where ecological concerns are not typically high: traffic chokes Moscow's roads, residents throw out rubbish with scant regard for recycling and the centrally controlled heating grinds out warmth during even the mildest winter.
>
> Russia lags behind in the growing multi-million-dollar organic food industry -- Moscow has just one self-styled organic supermarket.
>
> Called Grunwald, it is tucked away under an 18-storey concrete apartment block in a leafy, green suburb 30 minutes west by metro from the centre of Moscow.
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> Foreigners and wealthy Russians who live in nearby gated communities and dachas form the bulk of the customers, Marina Goldinberg, the supermarket's marketing manager, said.
>
> All the products in the store -- and everything is foreign -- have been certified to be GM-free.
>
> On a weekday mid-afternoon visit the handful of middle-aged women browsing the displays wore designer sunglasses on their heads and the latest fashion from London and Paris.
>
> They inspected GM-free apples from Argentina, which cost around $12.50 per kg, and wild salmon from Sweden at $80 per kg.
>
> "When this new law comes in we will stock locally grown and produced food, prices will drop and more and more people will shop here," Goldinberg said.
>
> And Dmitri Yanin, head of Russian consumer group KonFOP, said research appears to suggest GM-free produce is not a priority for most Russians.
>
> He said research last year showed 60 percent of food buyers in Russia said price was the most important factor in choosing what to buy. Just over 5 percent picked ingredients.
>
>
> Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
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