Washington, DC
October 28, 2008Source:
The Council for
Biotechnology Information
An
International Food Information Council (IFIC)
report
released Thursday, October 23 concludes that 84% of Americans
have favorable or neutral impressions of agricultural plant
biotechnology, while less than 16% hold an unfavorable
impression.
According to the 2008 Food Biotechnology: A Study of US
Consumer Trends Survey commissioned by IFIC, the
majority of Americans would be likely to purchase foods from
plants produced through biotechnology for specific benefits,
including 78% who responded that they would be more likely to
purchase foods produced through biotechnology that required
fewer pesticides as well as products that provide more healthful
fats like Omega-3.
The IFIC survey follows several recent studies published that
demonstrate growing support for agricultural biotechnology
worldwide.
European Studies
On October 14, The European Union released a report entitled:
Do European Consumers Buy GM Foods? The EU funded
study found that consumers are buying foods containing biotech
ingredients, despite a perceived opposition to biotechnology in
the EU. The study traces consumers’ actual shopping behaviors
with respect to agricultural biotechnology products in ten EU
countries following the EU introduction of a mandatory labeling
program for biotechnology foods in 2003.
The results unveil significant discrepancies when comparing
people's everyday choices at supermarkets to the attitudes they
expressed towards biotechnology foods in questionnaires. Nearly
half of the people who bought agricultural biotechnology-labeled
foods said they would not buy such products, while 30 percent of
consumers buying them did not know whether they had bought them.
In September, EuropaBio,
the European biotech industry association, released
data* demonstrating that
more European Union farmers are choosing to use biotechnology
crops to boost their productivity despite a 10-year moratorium
on new product approvals.
Asian Study
An Asian Food Information Centre
(AFIC) survey published in early October reported that in light
of the region's growing demand for high volumes of quality food,
consumers in China, India, Japan, Philippines and South Korea
are ready to accept foods produced using agricultural
biotechnology. The report, entitled Food Biotechnology: Consumer
perceptions of food biotechnology in Asia, found that in the
midst of heightened media attention on food concerns, Asian
consumers have high confidence in the role agricultural
biotechnology can play in increasing future food supplies and
are open-minded to the various benefits of food biotechnology.
In addition, the study found that Asian consumers are especially
inclined to accept plant biotechnology if the technology
contributes to a more sustainable way of producing foods.
Similar to the European Union consumer study, the AFIC report
concluded that the presence of labeling of biotechnology-derived
ingredients is not of significant importance to consumers in
their choice of foods.
To learn more about the benefits of agricultural biotechnology,
please visit
www.whybiotech.com.
The Council for
Biotechnology Information communicates science-based
information about the benefits and safety of agricultural
biotechnology and its contributions to sustainable development.
For more information, visit
www.whybiotech.com.
*
Latest figures
show that more EU farmers choose to grow biotech crops to boost
their competitiveness, but are the EU’s ag ministers listening? |
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