Brazil Defends GMOs at UN and Bars Tougher Rules on Biosafety

Key United Nations negotiations on the safe trade of genetically modified (GM) crops and foods ended yesterday in acrimony.

Despite over 100 countries demanding comprehensive controls to limit GM contamination, the move was blocked by just two countries that sided with the GMO industry – New Zealand and Brazil.


This week’s negotiations on the UN’s Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety were aimed at bringing in international rules to reduce contamination from imports of GM crops and to introduce full labelling.


However, little progress was made in making laws stronger, a move called for by virtually all countries, especially in the developing world. Needing consensus to bring in the new laws, New Zealand and Brazil sided with big business.


“The actions of Brazil and New Zealand are shameless. They have prevented the vast majority from bringing in rules that will protect the environment,” said Doreen Stabinsky, GMO Coordinator for Greenpeace International.


“Their victory, however, will be short-lived as global opposition to genetically engineered foods continues to grow.”


“The world community has shown here this week that it wants laws to protect itself from the threat of genetically modified foods and crops,” said Juan Lopez, GMO Coordinator of Friends of the Earth International.


“Two countries, Brazil and New Zealand, acting in the interest of big business, have held these talks hostage and destroyed the hopes of improving international laws.”


The Biosafety Protocol provides a safety net to protect the environment from the threat of GM crops. Countries are encouraged to develop legislation that protects their biodiversity and can also ban imports of GM products if there are questions over its safety. To date 119 countries have ratified the Protocol.


Friends of the Earth – www.foecanada.org


Greenpeace Canada – www.greenpeace.ca

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil, Champion of Inflation in the Mercosur

Brazil registered the highest inflation in the Mercosur in 2004, as gauged by the ...

Indian Foes in Brazil Burn Bridge and Isolate Indians

Around 3,500 people are stranded on the Raposa Serra do Sol Indian reservation, in ...

Brazil Changes the Guard in Haiti

The new commander of the Brazilian troops in Haiti, General João Carlos Vilela, took ...

In Face of U.S. Prepotency Brazil Can Only Show Cowardice

It’s not just at home that the Brazilian government acts shamefully. This  happens in ...

Brazil’s Bradesco Buys Mexican Bank and Has Plans for Mexico

Bradesco, Brazil’s second largest private bank, announced Friday that it plans to enter the ...

A New Push in Brazil for Conservation and Ecotourism

Brazil’s Ministry of Environment (MMA) announced, March 18, in São Paulo’s Ribeira Valley, the ...

Up and Coming

Yes, there are prosperous and even rich Brazilian blacks. And they are not just ...

Close to Half a Million Brazilians to Get Cancer This Year

Around 460 thousand Brazilian men and women are expected to fall victim to cancer ...

A Brazilian Hammock Maker Just for Gringos

Everything produced by Jobek, a hammock manufacturer from Fortaleza, city in the northeastern Brazilian ...

Brazil’s General Heleno Must Go from Haiti

The head of the UN Peacekeeping Mission in Haiti, Brazilian Lieutenant-General Augusto Heleno, should ...