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15/12/2024 Biggest Losers in Gene Technology Bill: Farmers, Exporters, Consumers, Animals, Nature |
Farmers, exporters, consumers and animals are the big losers in the proposed Gene Technology (GT) Bill which excludes from regulation a whole category of Gene Edited (GE) plants, animals and microorganisms. The Bill is the wish-list of the Biotechnology Industry and undermines the securities of the public, Māori, consumers and food producers. Most significantly, the Bill removes from regulation Gene Edited organisms that are considered similar to something that could emerge in nature or from older types of mutagenesis. There will be no monitoring of changes to a gene pool or of impacts on Nature as use of unregulated organisms scales up. The removal from regulation of these GE organisms means they will become untraceable through the food system. "The exemptions in the Gene Technology Bill from any regulation creates a Wild West for the gene technology industry in New Zealand.,” said Jon Carapiet, spokesman for GE-Free NZ. “Companies will not have to prove their Gene Edited organism has no unintentional changes and evidence of safety to people and the environment will not be required “Farmers and consumers are among the big losers in the Gene Technology Bill. They will be denied the right to choose as the exempt GE products and seeds will not be labelled.” Trust in the integrity of New Zealand’s food safety will be undermined by lack of traceability of GE organisms. Retailers in the EU are strongly supporting the regulation of GE products that the New Zealand Bill exempts. This has implication for market access. Surveys show traceability of GM and/or gene edited food products was a key concern for some stakeholders. There is a strong consumer demand in New Zealand’s export markets in Europe and US for tracing and labelling of Gene Edited products (called New Breeding /Precision Breeding /New Genomic Techniques). The Bill also subjects New Zealand to accepting approvals of GE organisms made overseas, removing public consultation of organisms approved by other recognised authorities. This means that a GE crop or organism will be able to be imported and released into New Zealand. Summarising the Gene Technology Bill
3. No Public Consultation
4. A License for Animal Cruelty
5. No Regional GE-Free Zones
We must preserve our point of difference for high quality food and produce by staying GE-Free. References: [1] https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U_E4gdKm8ijNhqMNqSjpCPwK2T6rGRp3/view [2] https://www.legislation.govt.nz/bill/government/2024/0110/latest/whole.html#LMS1009927 ENDS Jon Carapiet - spokesman - 0210507681 Claire Bleakley – president - 027 348 6731
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