By Colin Brown and Geoffrey
Lean Independent
Seed bank
couple fear GM threat to their life's work
GM maize is
to be grown in an officially sanctioned trial close to Europe's
largest research centre for organic crops, threatening the future
of organic farming in this country.
The trial,
which is due to begin this week in Warwickshire, is bound to spark
the biggest row yet in the controversy over GM crops in Britain.
Environmentalists
yesterday said that the effects could be "truly catastrophic"
for organic agriculture, and an MP said that he would support
direct action to stop it.
The experiment,
part of the Government's official "farm-scale trials"
of GM crops, is to take place within two miles of Europe's largest
research centre for organic crops at Ryton, near Coventry. The
centre run by the Henry Doubleday Research Association
carries out trials on organic crops for the European Union and
the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and is home to
one of the world's foremost organic seed banks.
The threat
is so serious that Michael Meacher, the Environment minister,
is this weekend making an unprecedented last-minute bid to stop
the trial, which he says is seen as "highly provocative",
even though his own department announced it a month ago. Neither
he, nor the government committee that authorised the trial, was
aware that it was close to the research station when it was given
the go-ahead.
The Soil Association
warns that the GM maize being tested by the food firm Aventis
at New Farm near Wolston, Warwickshire could cross-pollinate
with three crops of organic sweetcorn grown at Ryton, and in turn
contaminate the seed bank. Any trace of GM in the association's
fields would lead to it losing its licence to grow organic crops,
and pollution of the seed bank would strike a devastating blow
to the world's attempts to save rare varieties of foodstuffs.
"It is
hard to overstress how serious this is," Patrick Holden,
the director of the Soil Association, said yesterday. "The
effects of this trial could be truly catastrophic both for the
research station and for organic farming as a whole. This is the
worst example so far of a programme of insidious pollution of
the world's food crops by the GM industry."
Mr Meacher
told The Independent on Sunday last week: "Clearly there
has not been proper consideration of the impact of the choice
on a highly prestigious organic research centre of this kind."
He said he
was writing to Aventis, SCIMAC (the industry body overseeing the
trials) and the official Scientific Steering Committee that authorised
the use of the site to ask them to reconsider. In a separate but
related move, he is also asking for the sowing of two sites at
Mathry, Pembrokeshire, to be delayed so that there can be more
consultation with the public.
But late last
week Aventis said that all three sites would be sown this week.
The firm added that the farmer at the Warwickshire site had rung
to ask what he should do, and had been told to go ahead.
Mr Meacher
is credited with having given the Government's GM policies credibility
and a degree of public acceptability after its initially strong
pro-industry approach ran into opposition. But he is being increasingly
marginalised in Whitehall, and repeatedly out-voted on the cabinet
committee in charge of GM policy.
Environmentalists
alleged that GM firms had "pulled a fast one" on Mr
Meacher in an attempt to discredit him before a post-election
reshuffle. The industry denies this, though it privately makes
no secret of its desire to have him sacked.
Although Mr
Meacher's department announces the sites to be used for the trials,
he has no part in choosing them.
Dr David Gibbons,
a member of the committee, told The Independent on Sunday late
last week that it had not been told of the sites' proximity to
the Ryton research station. Roger Turner, SCIMAC's chairman, said
yesterday that there had been no attempt to deceive the committee.
He added: "If there is a reaction to this site, the industry
needs to sit down and think about whether it should go ahead."
But Aventis
said that "politics was now getting involved" with a
site chosen by an independent scientific committee.
Last night
Alan Simpson MP said he would support direct action to stop the
trial. He said: "This shows the contempt in which the industry
and advisers within government now hold democratically elected
views. It shows that the only way in which something can be achieved
is by taking direct action, and highlights what the 1 May protesters
were saying."
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