Genetically modified breakthrough or the beginning of the end for Russia? Resolution on sowing GMO grains. The President banned the cultivation of GMO products in Russia Countries where GMO products are prohibited


Every year the picture of fields sown with GMOs changes around the world. Some countries are expanding such acreage, while some, on the contrary, are completely abandoning modified crops.

Here is a list of countries that have banned genetically modified crops in one form or another:

In the United States: In California alone, Mendocino, Trinity and Marin counties have successfully banned GM crops. Voters in other California counties tried and failed to pass similar measures.

In Australia: Several Australian states have banned GM crops, but most have since lifted these bans. Only South Australia still has a ban on GM crops; Tasmania has extended the moratorium until 2029.

In Japan: The Japanese are strongly against genetically modified crops and no GM seeds are planted in the country. However, large quantities of canola are imported from Canada (one of the world's largest producers of GM canola) and wild GM canola is now growing around Japanese ports and roads to major food companies. Genetically modified canola, such as Monsanto's Roundup Ready canola, was found growing around 5 of the 6 ports tested for GM contamination.

In New Zealand: no genetically modified ones are grown in the country.

In Germany: There is also the sale of GMO corn.

In Norway (added in 2015): In 2014, she wrote a law on genetic technology, according to which the cultivation and sale of GMOs is prohibited in the country. The county of Oppland has been declared GMO-free.

In Ireland: All GM crops were banned from cultivation in 2009 and a voluntary labeling system was introduced for products containing genetically modified foods that are identified as such.

In Austria, Hungary, Greece, Bulgaria, Luxembourg And Italy: There are bans on the cultivation and sale of GMOs.

In France: Monsanto's GM was previously allowed in the country, but its cultivation has been banned by the government since 2008. There is widespread mistrust among the public towards GMOs.

In Madeira: The small, autonomous Portuguese island had asked for a nationwide ban on genetically modified crops and the EU allowed it last year.

In Switzerland: The country banned all GM organisms from its fields and farms following a public referendum in 2005, but the initial ban was passed for five years. In 2010, the ban was extended by Parliament until 2013 and again in 2012 until 2017. In March 2017, the ban on GMOs was extended until 2021.

In India: The government at the last moment imposed a ban on GM eggplants, which were planned to be planted in 2010. However, farmers were encouraged to plant Monsanto's genetically modified cotton, with devastating results. The English newspaper Daily Mail reported that approximately those who planted GM seeds committed suicide due to crop failure and huge debts.

In Thailand: the country simultaneously supports and opposes GM crops. The country imported GM papaya from Hawaii, where it was undergoing large-scale testing, but the country changed its plans when the seeds went wild and began contaminating nearby crops. As a result, some countries such as Japan have made attempts to restrict the import of papaya from Thailand, not wanting to import any genetically modified food products. Thailand is currently trying to cover both sides - producing organic food for some countries at a high price, although there is a noticeable trend towards growing GM crops. The country has also tried to declare some areas GMO-free zones in order to increase the level of trust among other countries in their food products.

Which countries are already using GM crops?
USA currently mainly grows GM lines of corn, canola and soybeans. GM papaya is now growing in Hawaii. Approvals have also been given for modified lines of alfalfa, squash, sugar beets and tomatoes, although not all are currently grown. A recent attempt to approve GM salmon failed.
China is one of the largest producers of GM crops.
Germany, Sweden and Czech Republic approved for growing GM potatoes.
Government Finland and the population are sensitive to genetically modified products. No GM crops are grown in the country as no approved GM crops are suitable for cultivation in the country due to weather conditions.
Government Zambia launched a campaign to get the public to support GM technology.
Canada widely uses GM crops. Almost all Canadian canola is GM, as is most soybeans and corn. Prince Edward Island tried and failed to ban GMO cultivation and currently grows GM crops there.
Spain currently grows GMO corn (about 20% of the country's corn is modified).
Czech Republic, Slovakia, Portugal, Romania everyone grows GMO corn.
Philippines grow GM crops.
Pakistan Since 2008, it has been growing genetically modified Bt cotton from Monsanto (cotton with the gene of the Bt bacterium (Bacillus Thuringiensis), since 2013 - GM eggplant, other crops are being approved.
European Union (EU) approved the cultivation of some GM crops (including potatoes and corn), but individual countries may refuse to grow them. However, most EU countries do not have the right to refuse the sale of genetically modified foods.
South Africa increases the number of GM crops grown.
England officially supports GM crops and conducts trials with already planted GM potatoes. However, there is widespread public mistrust of crops and Prince Charles has strongly opposed GMOs.
South America widely uses and grows GM crops.
As mentioned above, Thailand alternately supports and rejects GM crops.
India also makes extensive use of genetically modified cotton. It was mentioned above that the growth of Monsanto's genetically modified cotton crops led to tragedies throughout India. The Indian government even banned some common seeds from government seed banks in an attempt to please Monsanto (in return the country was given International Monetary Fund loans to boost the economy) and reduce poverty in the country. About 1,000 farmers in the country committed suicide every month due to crop failure and debt caused by growing genetically modified seeds. Farmers, after listening to Monsanto's promises of increased yields and pest resistance, were often willing to spend more money on "magic seeds" than regular seeds cost. Despite the promises, crops were often attacked by bollworms. Additionally, farmers were not warned that the crops required twice as much water as conventional cotton, causing many crops to dry out. Also, GM seeds had to be re-purchased for each new sowing season. Farmers accustomed to saving seeds year after year often found themselves in financial difficulties that led to insurmountable debt.

Global statistics are available from summary reports published by the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications (ISAAA) - www.isaaa.org (English) and the Biotechnology Industry Organization - www.bio.org (English).

Statistics on GMO cultivation by country

Statistics on GMOs for 2000

Thirteen countries grew genetically modified crops commercially in 2000, and of these, the United States produced the majority. In 2000, 68% of all GMO crops were grown by American farmers. In comparison, Argentina, Canada and China produced only 23%, 7% and 1% respectively. Other countries that grew commercial GMO crops in 2000 were: Australia, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Mexico, Romania, South Africa, Spain and Uruguay.

Statistics on GMOs for 2007

In 2007, 114.3 million hectares of the world were sown with GM crops.

Statistics on crops

Soybeans and corn are two of the most widely grown crops (82% of all GMO crops harvested in 2000). 74% of these GMO crops were modified to resist herbicides, 19% were modified to resist insect pests, and 7% were modified to resist both herbicides and insects. Globally, the area where GM crops are grown has increased 25-fold in just 5 years, from approximately 4.3 million hectares in 1996 to 109 million acres in 2000 (almost twice the size of the UK). About 99 million acres were devoted to GMO crops in the US and Argentina alone.

In the US, approximately 54% of all soybeans grown in 2000 were genetically modified, up from 42% in 1998 and only 7% in 1996. In 2000, genetically modified cotton varieties accounted for 61% of the total cotton harvest, up from 42% in 1998 and 15% in 1996. The share of GMO corn has apparently undergone an equally dramatic increase. The amount of genetically modified corn increased to 25% of all corn grown in 2000, about the same in 1998 (26%), up from 1.5% in 1996. As expected, the amount of pesticides and herbicides used on these GMO varieties has decreased and yields have generally increased (for details, see the UDSA publication on

Facts: Genetic modification is different from traditional ways breeding and poses its own set of unique risks.

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The term "genetic modification" refers to the unnatural process of taking genes from one species and, using special tools, viruses or bacteria, introducing them into another organism. This process never occurs in nature. So, when it comes to seeds and genetically engineered ingredients in our food, we are talking about completely unnatural processes.

Traditional breeding has been around for thousands of years. People can cross breeds, for example, of tomato plants with favorable qualities: better taste, resistance to natural diseases, etc., with other tomatoes. This is not what happens when we talk about genetically modified seeds.

Most GMO seeds currently being developed can withstand high doses of herbicides when sprayed. The company that creates the seed also sells chemical fertilizers for them. This is a package of services.

GMO Myth #2: We should use GMO seeds to control weeds and pests.

Facts: Ironically, GMO technology has actually made pest problems even worse.

Most GMO seeds used today have been genetically modified or produced with their own pesticides in-house and are able to withstand high doses of chemical pesticides that would normally kill the plant.

In 2012, 154 million acres were planted with genetically modified soybeans, corn, alfalfa, cotton, canola and sugar beets designed to withstand chemical dousing with herbicides.

About a third of that land now harbors superweeds, problem plants that don't die when sprayed with pesticides.

Most GMO seeds are designed to contain high doses of glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup.

Weeds have quickly become resistant to glyphosate, meaning more concentrated and more frequent applications of pesticides to control weeds.

Professor Chuck Benbrook, Ph.D., a research professor at Washington State University, recently found that between 1996 and 2011, GMO technology actually increased herbicide use by 250 million kilograms—that's an 11 percent increase.

Every time the dose of pesticides and insecticides is reduced, GMO seeds do not produce the required yield.

GMO Myth #3: GMO reduces farmers' dependence on older, more toxic pesticides.

Facts: Currently in the Department Agriculture The US is asking to approve a new generation of GMO corn and soy crops designed to withstand high doses of 2,4-D, an old toxic herbicide, because current ones no longer work.

21 weed species are now resistant to glyphosphate.

Millions of acres of farmland are now ; some farmers pay up to $150 per acre per hour for hand weeding.

GMO Myth #4: GMO ingredients are safe to consume.

Facts: GMO ingredients have never been adequately tested for long-term public health effects, despite their use since 1996.

There are about 600 studies on the composition of genetically engineered products in terms of the amount of calories, proteins, fats and vitamins.

These are mostly industry-funded studies that are typically performed to show the nutritional value of food and drug products that are comparable to non-GMO foods, or to convince livestock producers that GMO feeds are on par with non-GMO feeds.

Both types of research have nothing to do with human health and safety, Dr. Benbrook warns.

Some of the very few researchers looking at the short-term health effects are alarmed. A carefully designed meta-analysis of 19 long-term published mammalian studies found that when fed GMO corn or soybeans, subjects exhibited potential health effects. chronic diseases kidney, liver and bone marrow damage.

GMOs have also led to a rapid increase in food allergies.

Roundup, which is often sprayed on GMOs, has been linked to certain types of cancer, DNA damage, premature birth, and ADHD.

Glyphosphate levels can build up in the body and this can lead to:

Violations in endocrine system leading to obesity, heart problems, circulation problems and diabetes.
Low glyphosphate levels are also associated with damage to the immune system, birth defects, cell death, and...

Also, GMO feed harms animals. In a recent study published in the Journal of Organic Systems, researchers in Australia and the US found that pigs fed the genetic diet were much more likely to develop severe stomach inflammation and uterine density, a condition that can mean endometrial cancer, endometriosis, gynecological polyps, fertility.

GMO Myth #5: GMOs are safe for the environment.

Facts: GMOs are pressing on and have already destroyed several plant species.

The catastrophic decline of Monarch butterflies due to the use of glyphosate, used in GMO cultivation. Glyphosate kills milkweed plants near fields and roads; Monarchs use milkweed to reproduce and feed on its leaves.

Insecticides that are sprayed on GMO plants cause neurological problems in bees.

Agricultural holdings and farmers use so much Roundup that it has been found in air currents and even rain, which can be harmful to humans.

GMO Myth #6: GMO technology is an exact science

.

Facts: Although GMO technology is improving, it is still young and not very reliable.

When inserting a foreign gene into a plant, there is a 1 in 100 trillion chance of inserting two genes instead of one, says researcher Howard Vlieger.

The characteristics of the seeds indicated by the plant may have other characteristics, including those that we have not even discovered yet. We don't know how this might affect human health, but GMOs have already led to a rapid increase in food allergies.

Science knows very little about the genome of any crop species and its genetic, biochemical, and cellular functioning. Even where gene insertion is considered "safe", it is possible to obtain a toxic yield or poor nutritional value, or reduce its ability to resist disease, pests, droughts or other challenges, described in the Earth Open Source report

GMO Myth No. 7: Only thanks to GMO technologies can we feed the growing population of the planet

The amount of products produced can already feed about 10 billion people. But the lion's share of this production goes to biofuels and other types of energy. Yet more than 1 billion people on Earth go hungry every day.

This is not due to the quantity of products produced, but to the current state of affairs with the distribution of resources.

How to check whether seeds are GMO or regular hybrids?

There are two ways:

1. Find laboratories in your city that perform such analysis and order an analysis for them at your own expense. Perhaps there are such laboratories at the Sanitary and Epidemiological Station, perhaps somewhere else. I don’t have exact information on this yet, but I’ll look for it.

2. Plant seeds taken from the F1 harvest and check in practice - if the plant produces at least some fruits, then it is a regular hybrid, if there are no fruits at all, it is a 100% GMO hybrid. Since one of the characteristics of GMO seeds is complete sterilization of plants - i.e. the second generation will simply bloom exclusively with male flowers and produce no fruit at all. Therefore, those who bought hybrids and tried to get second-generation seeds from them, but were faced with such a phenomenon as the absence of fruits at all - this means that they used seeds from GMO plants.

Why do GMO seeds produce sterile plants in the second generation?


Plant sterility is one of the main characteristics of GMO seeds. This is due to the fact that producers of GMO seeds are aimed at obtaining constant profits from their sales. Farmers, knowing about the sterility of GMO hybrids, are forced to constantly purchase such seeds from their manufacturers, which provides a constant and fairly large income. It is precisely for the reason of profitability that GMO producers sterilize their seed products at the genetic level.

This property of plant sterility is manifested in the fact that the second generation taken from GMO plants will produce exclusively male flowers.

What is the danger of planting seeds of GMO hybrids and conventional varieties?

If plants tend to cross-pollinate among themselves, then such a danger exists. If a regular variety is cross-pollinated with a GMO hybrid, you can lose your variety completely, as it will not only lose the purity of its variety, but will also dramatically lose its yield, which will ultimately lead to its complete degeneration.

Corn, legumes, peppers, and cruciferous vegetables (cabbage, rapeseed, radishes, turnips) are especially easily pollinated. By the way, our fields are often sown with rapeseed using GMO seeds, which prevent its re-sprouting in the third year. Those. Having sowed rapeseed in the fields, in the second year the plants will be sterile and in the third year the field will be completely cleared of both the rapeseed itself and the weeds that the rapeseed suppresses during growth.

It is very easy to purchase corn from GMO producers. Corn is one of the first and one of the main crops that has undergone such genetic processing. GMO producers, knowing this, were able to make millions in profit from those farmers whose fields were pollinated by theirhybrids. Knowing about the ease of cross-pollination of corn, GMO producers did a DNA analysis of the plants of these farmers and, naturally, the tests turned out to be positive, as a result of which the GMO producers sued the farmers for very large sums money, accusing them of deliberate cross-pollination.Hundreds of farmers not only went bankrupt because of this, but also committed suicide, unable to pay such huge sums. Other farmers went bankrupt, losing all their harvests as a result of accidental cross-pollination of varieties and GMO hybrids.

Why are GMO seeds attractive to farmers?

Despite all the events described above, GMO seeds are still attractive to those would-be farmers who care exclusively about monetary profit based on the “here and now” principle. After all, GMO seeds have properties and qualities that are not yet available to conventional varieties - this includes resistance to diseases, resistance to chemical treatments, this high yields and beautiful fruits, this is their hardness and increased shelf life of products - after all, they are genetically programmed for this.

Such fruits, of course, are more attractive for sales and therefore farmers prefer to grow GMO plants rather than domestic varieties.

This choice is dictated by business conditions, which are focused on quick and large profits, to the detriment of the moral and ethical side.

GMOs are most widespread in such socially poor countries as Argentina, Brazil, China, and India. Now Ukraine and Russia have joined them. Other countries, such as Holland, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Germany, also grow GMO plants, but not for the domestic market, but to import their products into these same socially poor countries.

The USA surpasses all countries in sowing and producing GMO products. After all, this is where the main areas and bases of MONSANTO are located, and that’s where it all began... It would seem that this is not a poor country, why does GMO flourish in it? You can look for the answer on the Internet, where some sources indicate that the Rothschilds and some representatives of the US government, interested in big profits, are behind this company.

If GMOs are so harmful, why is it becoming so widespread around the world?

GMO producers actively bribe and even physically eliminate their opponents, as evidenced by numerous publications in the Western press. They pursue their aggressive policy against dissenters and those who scientifically criticize their products.

But, despite such an aggressive promotion policy, many Western farmers categorically refuse to grow GMO products on their territory. They organize themselves into communities called GMO-Free Zones. And recently there are more and more such farmers in the West.

Here I provide a map of the distribution of GMO plants across the world. The figures indicate sown areas in millions of hectares. data on Russia, as always, is classified, which gives the impression that it is free from GMOs. :)


However, Russia is the country where the main products of GMO vegetables are exported, here is the map:

On the debate about the benefits and harms of consuming GMOs in the scientific and public world:

Disputes between the usefulness and harmfulness of GMO plants have been going on in the scientific and public world since the creation of the technology itself. However, this debate is about nothing. Evidence of the harmlessness of GMO products is provided by the producers of GMO seeds themselves. Naturally, they are extremely interested in pushing their products onto the market, so you cannot trust their evidence base - of course.

Scientists different countries, who conducted research on experimental animals, identified numerous side effects from the consumption of GMO plants, in particular such an effect as sexual dysfunction in experimental mice, up to sterility in subsequent offspring (remember the sterility of GMO seeds), congenital deformities, reduced life expectancy in mice, starting from the second and third generation, etc. .d.

Here are the results of the experiments of individual scientific researchers:


However, such studies were often abruptly stopped or the evidence was destroyed with special care due to the same aggressive policies of GMO producers, who were followed by a whole trail of crimes against scientific organizations that disagreed with the results of the research of the GMO producers themselves.

It is precisely because of the dangers of consuming GMO products that many countries actively resisted the introduction of these products into their markets.

Japan, whose standard of living is quite high and, being one of the most developed countries in the world, is an active opponent of the introduction of GMO plants into its market. The cultivation of GMO seeds is prohibited in the country, although the supply of imported products is not excluded. The average life expectancy of the Japanese is 80 years - this is one of the highest rates in the world (especially compared to our 62 years and 72 for the Americans). If GMO plants were truly harmless to people, then Japan would be one of the first to introduce them into its production and distribution, just as it introduces all scientific developments in electronics and technology. But, apparently, she, better than anyone, understands the unsafety of such products. However, if her government is bribed, then, most likely, she will give up her position before the onslaught of the MONSANTO corporation, which uses not so much marketing promotion as financial and political influence on individual members of the government.

On June 24, the State Duma banned the cultivation of GMOs in Russia. Why was this law required and in whose interests was it adopted? Are GMOs so scary and why are they banned? What will this ban do for Russia? Will the quality of products improve or, conversely, will production volume decrease?

What is the essence of the new GMO law?

On June 24, the State Duma of the Russian Federation adopted a law banning the cultivation and breeding of genetically and engineered plants and animals in Russia - an exception was made only for examinations and scientific research.

“It is prohibited to bring into the territory Russian Federation and use for sowing (planting) seeds of plants whose genetic program has been changed using genetic engineering methods and which contain genetically engineered material, the introduction of which cannot be the result of natural (natural) processes, with the exception of sowing (planting) such seeds during examinations and scientific research work,” the text of the law says.

It is noteworthy that the import of products obtained using genetically modified organisms (GMOs) new law does not prohibit. True, these products will have to undergo mandatory registration. A ban or permission to use them will be given based on the results of the examination.

The law will come into force on July 1, 2017. For violation of the new rules for the use of GMOs, fines are provided: for officials - from 10 to 50 thousand rubles, for legal entities - from 50 to 100 thousand rubles.

How has the distribution of GMOs been regulated in Russia so far?

The adopted ban was the result of many years of struggle between supporters and opponents of GMOs in Russia, full of drama and intrigue. The intensity of passions reached its next peak a couple of years ago. In the summer of 2013, tens of thousands of citizens signed a call to declare Russia a “GMO-free zone.” By this time, according to the National Union for the Protection of Consumer Rights, in Russia, despite the ban, about 400 thousand hectares were already sown with GM crops (mainly corn and soybeans), and the import of some varieties of soybeans, corn, potatoes, and rice was allowed and sugar beets.

It is obvious that dependence on imported planting material poses a direct threat to the country's food security. However, according to experts, it is impossible to revive domestic selection and seed production using traditional technologies - over the past decades, the country has fallen very far behind such leaders in this area as the USA and the Netherlands. You can turn the situation around only by using the most modern technologies, equally new for all market participants. According to scientists, in such a situation one cannot abandon the development of genetic engineering. However, in conditions market economy and reductions in government funding, the ban adopted by the State Duma may lead to a forced curtailment of research in this area.

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