What are GMOs?
GMOs (or “genetically
modified organisms”) are living organisms whose genetic material has been
artificially manipulated in a laboratory through genetic engineering, or GE.
This relatively new science creates unstable combinations of plant, animal,
bacteria and viral genes that do not occur in nature or through traditional
crossbreeding methods.
Virtually all
commercial GMOs are engineered to withstand direct application of herbicide
and/or to produce an insecticide. Despite biotech industry promises, none of
the GMO traits currently on the market offer increased yield, drought
tolerance, enhanced nutrition, or any other consumer benefit.
Meanwhile, a growing
body of evidence connects GMOs with health problems, environmental damage and
violation of farmers’ and consumers’ rights.
Are GMOs safe?
Most developed nations
do not consider GMOs to be safe. In more than 60 countries around the world,
including Australia, Japan, and all of the countries in the European Union,
there are significant restrictions or outright bans on the production and sale
of GMOs. In the U.S., the government has approved GMOs based on studies
conducted by the same corporations that created them and profit from their
sale. Increasingly, Americans are taking matters into their own hands and
choosing to opt out of the GMO experiment.
Are GMOs labeled?
Unfortunately, even
though polls consistently show that a significant majority of Americans want to
know if the food they’re purchasing contains GMOs, the powerful biotech lobby
has succeeded in keeping this information from the public. In the absence of
mandatory labeling, the Non-GMO Project was created to give consumers the
informed choice they deserve.
Where does the Non-GMO
Project come in?
The Non-GMO Project is
a non-profit organization with a mission of protecting the non-GMO food supply
and giving consumers an informed choice. We offer North America’s ONLY third
party verification for products produced according to rigorous best practices
for GMO avoidance (for more info, click here). Our strategy is to empower
consumers to make change through the marketplace. If people stop buying GMOs,
companies will stop using them and farmers will stop growing them.
Do Americans want
non-GMO foods and supplements?
Polls consistently show
that a significant majority of North Americans would like to be able to tell if
the food they’re purchasing contains GMOs (a 2012 Mellman Group poll found that
91% of American consumers wanted GMOs labeled). And, according to a recent
CBS/New York Times poll, 53% of consumers said they would not buy food that has
been genetically modified. The Non-GMO Project’s seal for verified products
will, for the first time, give the public an opportunity to make an informed
choice when it comes to GMOs.
How common are GMOs?
In the U.S., GMOs are
in as much as 80% of conventional processed food. Click here for a current list
of GMO risk crops.
Why does the Non-GMO
Project verify products that have a low risk of containing GMOs?
Some ingredients that
seem low-risk may have less-visible high-risk ingredients. Take, for example, dried fruit. Raisins and similar fruit are sometimes
packed with a small quantity of oil to keep them moist. This oil, when used, is sometimes
high-GMO-risk. As such, it is critical
that we do take the time to look carefully at ingredient spec sheets during the
verification process, to ensure that risks like this are effectively mitigated,
even in apparently low-risk products.
Contamination incidents
have occurred with seemingly “low-risk” products (rice, starling corn, flax).
Non-GMO Project Verification supports manufacturers in being able to quickly
and proactively respond to unexpected contamination issues.
Verifying only
high-risk products puts a heavy burden on consumers to know what products are
at risk of containing GMOs. Many people,
even in the world of Natural Foods, don’t know what a GMO is, let alone which
crops and processed ingredients are high-risk.
As such, labeling only products that contain high-risk ingredients could
give an unfair competitive advantage to products that contain ingredients
containing corn, soy, etc. Taking the
cereal aisle for our example, if we verified only high-risk products, a shopper
might see the seal on a box of verified corn flakes, but not on the wheat-based
cereal box next to them, produced with the same high standards by the same
company. This could leave them thinking the corn flakes were non-GMO, but that
they should avoid the wheat product, even though there’s no GMO wheat on the
market. Given the lack of understanding
of the issue, this presents some serious issues.
Through verifying
low-risk products, the Non-GMO Project’s work builds consumer interest and industry
investment in Non-GMO, even for crops that aren’t genetically engineered
yet. Biotech is constantly working to
patent and commercialize new organisms (salmon, apples, etc.), and the more
companies that have committed to Non-GMO production, the more resistance these
new developments will see prior to release.
What are the impacts of
GMOs on the environment?
Over 80% of all GMOs
grown worldwide are engineered for herbicide tolerance. As a result, use of
toxic herbicides like Roundup has increased 15 times since GMOs were
introduced. GMO crops are also responsible for the emergence of “super weeds”
and “super bugs:’ which can only be killed with ever more toxic poisons like
2,4-D (a major ingredient in Agent Orange). GMOs are a direct extension of chemical
agriculture, and are developed and sold by the world’s biggest chemical
companies. The long-term impacts of GMOs are unknown, and once released into
the environment these novel organisms cannot be recalled.
How do GMOs affect
farmers?
Because GMOs are novel
life forms, biotechnology companies have been able to obtain patents with which
to restrict their use. As a result, the companies that make GMOs now have the
power to sue farmers whose fields are contaminated with GMOs, even when it is
the result of inevitable drift from neighboring fields. GMOs therefore pose a
serious threat to farmer sovereignty and to the national food security of any
country where they are grown, including the United States.
How can I avoid GMOs?
Choose food and
products that are Non-GMO Project Verified!
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