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Showing posts with label GMO beets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GMO beets. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

GMOs and Glyphosate Linked to Infertility, Botulism and SIDS


USDA Deregulates GMO Sugar Beets



On Friday, June 1, 2012, the Animal Plant and Health Inspection Service (APHIS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that it has completed the final assessment of Monsanto’s genetically engineered sugar beets that were modified to withstand continued applications of the Monsanto’s flagship herbicide, Roundup.  Since every application for deregulation of a genetically engineered crop has so far beenapproved, it surprised no one when the agency again recommended a complete deregulation.
APHIS prepared two assessments — an environmental impact statement and a plant pest risk assessment.  Both assessments were made pursuant to court orders after a lengthy legal battle with the USDA by concerned consumer and environmental groups.
The initial lawsuit, filed in January 2008, was in response to the agency’s decision to deregulate genetically engineered sugar beets. In September 2009, the district court ordered the agency to conduct a full environmental impact study. The following year, in August 2010, the same court set aside the agency’s initial deregulation decision of GE sugar beets.
The USDA’s response to the court’s August 2010 ruling was to grant industry members temporary permits that allowed continued planting of GE sugar beets, forcing environmental groups back into count to challenge the agency conduct. The district court ruled that seedlings planted pursuant to the permits must be destroyed. An Appellate Court, however,  overturned that decision in February 2011. That same month APHIS announced that it will grant Monsanto’s request for a partial deregulation allowing planting of GE sugar beets with certain limitations until the agency conducts the court-ordered assessments.
George Kimbrell, Senior Attorney with the Center for Food Safety (CFS), one of the plaintiffs in the case, told me that CFS was “disappointed” with the agency’s decision and that CFS is reviewing the 800-plus page assessments to determine if any action is warranted.  SOURCE
Selections from Natural Health News



Aug 13, 2010
In today's ruling the Court officially “vacated” the USDA “deregulation” of Monsanto's biotech sugar beets and prohibited any future planting and sale pending the agency's compliance with NEPA and all other relevant laws.
Feb 05, 2011
This Friday USDA announced that it will allow the planting of Monsanto's “Roundup Ready” GE sugar beets even though the agency has yet to finalize conducting an Environmental Impact Statement (”EIS”). The Center for ...
Sep 23, 2009
Noting that pollen from genetically altered sugar beets could be blown by the wind long distances to related crops, such as chard and table beets, the judge ordered the agency to produce an environmental impact statement ...

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Current Status of GMO Sugar Beets

USDA OKs Partial Deregulation of GE Sugar Beets

Shortly after US Department of Agriculture (”USDA”) decided to completely deregulate genetically engineered (”GE”) alfalfa, consumers and the organic movement faced another set back.  This Friday USDA announced that it will allow the planting of Monsanto’s “Roundup Ready” GE sugar beets even though the agency has yet to finalize conducting an Environmental Impact Statement (”EIS”). The Center for Food Safety, Organic Seed Alliance, High Mowing Organic Seeds, and the Sierra Club, a coalition of farmers and conservation groups that has been legally challenging the agency’s deregulation decision since 2008, announced that they will go back to court to test the legitimacy of the agency’s recent decision.
Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff, one of the attorneys for the coalition group, commented:
The lax conditions on growing the GE sugar beets in today’s approval are not materially different from those earlier rejected by the federal court as inadequate to protect other farmers, the public, and the environment.  USDA has yet again violated the law requiring preparation of an EIS before unleashing this genetically engineered crop.
An attorney for Center Food Safety also said that a legal intervention was necessary because “USDA continues to bow to industry pressure and permits further commercial production of Roundup Ready sugar beets, without first preparing an EIS or protecting the public.”
Since 2008, when the coalition group filed a lawsuit challenging USDA’s decision to deregulate GE sugar beets without conducting an EIS, the agency has conducted itself rather embarrassingly.  Not long after a District Court judge vacated the agency’s deregulation decision on August 13, 2010, the agency tried to get around the judge’s ruling by issuing permits to four seed companies to plant stecklings of GE sugar beets, forcing the the coalition group to go back to court challenging the agency’s conduct.  The Court ruled in favor of the coalition group on November 30, 2010, finding that the agency’s decision to issue the permits was an unlawful attempt to “avoid the impact of the Court’s prior order” in which the Court found that USDA violated federal law when the agency deregulated the crops resulting in the court vacating the agency’s deregulation determination.  As a result of such conduct, the  Court issued a preliminary injunction on Nov. 30 and directed the removal of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready seedlings. The implementation of that order was put on hold pending an appeal.
USDA has often been referred to as a “rogue” agency for favoring, in ways found at times to be unlawful, industry interests over those of consumers and the environment.
Selected from Natural Health News
Aug 13, 2010
In today's ruling the Court officially “vacated” the USDA “deregulation” of Monsanto's biotech sugar beets and prohibited any future planting and sale pending the agency's compliance with NEPA and all other relevant laws. ...
Sep 23, 2009
US District Judge Jeffrey White in San Francisco found the US Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service violated environmental law by failing to take a "hard look" at whether "Roundup Ready" sugar beets ...