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Brazil agrees to grow GM crops (Friday, Sept. 26, 2003 -- CropChoice news) -- John Vidal and Gareth Chetwynd, The Guardian: SAO PAULO -- Brazil, the last big country to resist GM crops, dashed the hopes of
environmentalists yesterday and gave in to pressure from the US and its own
big farmers to allow them to be grown for at least a year.
After a day of protests, Greenpeace Brazil, the Brazilian Green party and
non-governmentel groups announced that they would seek to get the decision
overturned in the courts.
The government was divided on the decision, which was suported by
agriculture officials, who said they were anxious to keep abreast of the
latest technological developments.
Opponents of GM foods were disappointed by the apparent u-turn by President
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose Workers Party (PT) resisted GM crops when
it was in opposition.
It was presented as a one-year emergency measure because farmers in Rio
Grande do Sul state have for several years smuggled large quantities of GM
soya seed across the Argentine border.
The government accepted that there was little prospect of forcing them to
buy conventional seed when the planting season begins in the next two weeks.
The GM company Monsanto now stands to gain up to $100m ($62m) a year from
farmers who have been growing its seed illegally.
It has invested more than $600m in setting up seed plants and buying
Brazilian seed companies. It recently announced that it would start charging
farmers royalties on this year's soya crop.
US producers have long complained that Brazil has had an unfair advantage
because many of its farmers do not pay royalties for black-market GM soya.
The lifting of the planting ban was described by critics as a triumph for
the company.
"Instead of enforcing the law, the authorities have allowed big farming
interests to dictate their own terms," said Karin Silverwood-Cope, a
coordinator for the NGP Campaign for a GM Free Brazil.
Bob Callanan, head of the American Soybean Association, which is fervently
pro-GM, said: "We have long been frustrated by Brazil growing illegal GM
seeds. This would be a step towards allowing Monsanto to collect the fees
due to it and help to end the paper shuffle where EU countries bought
Brazilian foods and pretended that it was not GM."
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/gmdebate/Story/0,2763,1050042,00.html
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