Madrid, Spain
June 23, 2004
Agence France Presse via
As Reported in the News, The Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology
Spanish Environment Minister
Cristina Narbona said the government would seek the advice of
independent researchers about continuing with the country's
extensive cultivation of biotech crops, reports the Agence
France Presse.
She accused the previous conservative government of authorizing
a massive extension of genetically modified crops without
waiting for scientists to reach a definitive opinion.
She suggested that the former government had taken decisions on
the basis of research funded by the biotech industry itself.
"In recent years Spain has become
Europe's big granary of GM corn,"
Narbona told reporters.
"This is the result of a decision by the previous government to
allow the growing in our country of a crop on which the
scientific community has yet to form a conclusive opinion," she
said.
"There are those who believe this should not be a cause for
concern and others, more independent of the lines of research
financed by the biotech industry, who hold a different opinion."
Narbona added that a joint inquiry set up by the ministries of
agriculture and environment under the new Socialist government
would consult the broadest possible range of scientific advice,
reports AFP.
"We want to reinforce independent research in this area, and I
underline the word independent, because in this country, where
there is little scientific investigation, many researchers are
privately financed by companies that want the research to have a
specific conclusion," she said.
"Not only must we carry out more research, but we need more
sources of independent research."
The Greenpeace environmental organization said recently that
Spain is the only country
in the European Union that has been producing genetically
modified grain since 1998.
It said half a million tons of biotch corn are sold on the
national market every year, according to AFP.
As Reported in the News
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