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The Rural Voice, 2000-02, Page 18J t may be hard to market even genetically altered varieties that are approved for importation into Europe, an OMAFRA marketing official told producers at Grey -Bruce Farmers Week. Pleading with producers not to shoot the messenger, Dermod Mark, of OMAFRA's Market Development Branch, told producers the movement against genetically altered (GMO) food is such that buyers in some countries are staying far away from anything that will create doubt among consumers. In Britain, things have gone so far that even the caterer for the Monsanto cafeteria has just declared it is GMO free, Mark said. The GMO debate is science and technology versus morals and ethics, Mark said. Supporters of GMO's can complain Unit about the emotion GMO OR NO? Genetically altered varieties may make economic sense for Ontario farmers but exporting the grain could prove a challenge, marketer says By Keith Roulston 5 In Britain the debate on GMO foods like soybeans is over, Dermod Mark says. In Canada it's just begun. 14141 N. • 4 A involved but people are emotional about food, he said. In a former job with OMAFRA, Mark had been involved in Foodland Ontario consumer research. People asked to draw a picture about food showed a family sitting around a table eating, he said. People also associated food with love — preparing a meal for those you care was seen as one of the greatest acts of love. Food is also culture, Mark said. And people get passionate about food. Food is emotion, he said, and those against genetically altered foods are speaking a language much closer to the consumer than the scientists, commercial interests and farmers are. The consumer will decide the issue, Mark says, even if consumers sometimes make the wrong decision. "The consumer does not perceive any benefit to GMO food," he says. The benefit, as they see it, is to the big multinational companies creating the seeds being grown. 14 THE RURAL VOICE "The debate is over in Britain," he told producers. "GMO foods won't come back for 15 years." Companies supporting genetically altered foods have turned their attention to trying to educate the generation now in school to accept GMOs, taking students to labs and getting them interested in the science of genetic engineering. "They've gone right over the top (in Britain) on this one," Mark said. A law says you can ask your server in a restaurant if there is any genetically -altered material in food being served. Since of course every server isn't going to be able to know, restaurants have essentially become GMO free, including Monsanto's caterer. The British have reason to be wary of their food and suspicious of scientists after the BSE (mad cow disease) outbreak, Mark says. The food retailer Iceland Foods, which is similar to our M&M Meats, surveyed its customers and found 77 per cent were worried about GMOs in food. Since the company announced it would go GMO free, it's sales grew 10 per cent in each of the last two years. With those kind of results other major retailers have been following Iceland's example. As well, in Britain retailers as the end link in the food chain carry the liability for problems with their food. Their one defence is to prove they've shown due diligence. Therefore companies are putting the onus back ontheir suppliers to prove that their products are GMO free. Retailers are going well beyond any regulatory standard, Mark said. Usually a government minimum standard becomes the maximum but not in food. Now being offered in Britain are GMO-free meat and eggs with suppliers having to guarantee there are no GMO ingredients in feeds. One large Swiss food chain is also offering GMO free eggs and meat. The next big battle ground will be in animal feed, Mark said. "If the Japanese want their pork from pigs that haven't been fed GMO feeds, they'll get it. The Danes will be able to supply it if we can't." The Japanese have a mandatory GMO labeling program coming into place April 1, 2000 but it won't be enforced for a year. All products must be labeled if there are ingredients that are not substantially equivalent to natural products. Because of worries that some ingredient might not meet the regulations, companies will probably avoid the possibility by remaining GMO free. The Japanese tofu association has said it wants GMO- free soybeans. Japanese supermarkets, even a major beer company, have declared themselves GMO free. Many Canadian export companies don't even begin to understand the immensity of the problem, Mark