• Over 700 articles on nuclear power, nuclear weapons, climate change, transport, GM, pollution, waste, wildlife, freedom of information and other issues from Rob Edwards, a freelance environmental journalist with the Sunday Herald and New Scientist. Over 100,000 hits, no abuse and no adverts.

GM

GM seeds: be very afraid

from Green Pages, 13 February 2008

First there was Terminator. Now there is Exorcist and Zombie. And farmers should certainly be afraid. Very afraid.

For these are not just some Hollywood horror movies. They are the nicknames given to the new genetic seed technologies being developed by industries and governments which threaten to deprive farmers in developing countries of their traditional rights to harvest the seeds from the plants they grow.

The development, patenting and potential use of such technologies is just one sign of the mushrooming influence of multinational corporations on the global seed business. The relentless drive for more profits from plants, critics say, is endangering the natural diversity of crops on which humanity has depended for centuries.

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Government to back bid to ban GM crops in Europe

from Sunday Herald, 25 November 2007

The Scottish government will this week make an unprecedented intervention in Brussels to try and help ban genetically modified (GM) crops throughout Europe.

The environment minister, Michael Russell, is planning to back a controversial bid by the European environment commissioner, Stavros Dimas, to block applications to grow GM maize from three multinational companies.

The move is likely to heighten tensions with Westminster, which has been increasingly irritated by Holyrood's anti-GM stance. It will also annoy the GM industry - but delight environmentalists who want to see Europe stay GM-free.

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GM foods backed by Scotland's science advisor

from Sunday Herald, 24 December 2006

AnnegloverPeople are being urged by Scotland's new chief scientific adviser to overcome their fears and embrace genetically modified (GM) food as an answer to poverty, hunger and toxic pollution.

Professor Anne Glover, herself a genetic engineer, is urging consumers to ignore labels like "Frankenstein foods" because they are misleading and damaging. The potential benefits of GM crops are "huge", she says, and the risks "extremely small".

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Finnie warned on legality of GM guidelines

from Sunday Herald, 29 October 2006

If Scottish ministers follow the example of Westminster on new rules for growing GM crops they will break European law.

Legal experts have concluded that the regime proposed by the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) in London to prevent organic food from being contaminated by GM crops grown nearby is “fundamentally flawed”.

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Sale of illegal GM rice sanctioned by food watchdog

from Sunday Herald, 17 September 2006

Rice that has been illegally contaminated with genetically modified (GM) organisms from the United States is being sold in Scotland because the government’s food safety watchdog has failed to recommend the product’s withdrawal.

A number of supermarkets are following the advice of the Food Standards Agency (FSA) and leaving suspect GM rice on their shelves. Others, however, have said they are withdrawing the rice due to consumer concerns.

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Monsanto boss urged to quit Scots quango over GM bribery case

from Sunday Herald, 09 January 2005

THE Scottish boss of the genetically modified (GM) crops multinational Monsanto is under pressure to quit as a business adviser to Scottish Enterprise after his company admitted to paying $750,000 (£401,000) in bribes to government officials in Indonesia.

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Should scientists tamper with nature?

talk to Royal Society, Edinburgh, 09 November 2004

My business is words, so I want to start - and end - my short contribution to this evening's discussion by talking about words. Some of you may know this passage from the book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible:

"I returned, and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all."

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A conflict of interest

comment from New Scientist, 26 June 2004

NUCLEAR power, genetically modified crops, prescription drugs, passive smoking - name the debate, and you will find opinion pieces on it by the most senior figures in science in newspapers and magazines across the world. What is bewildering, if not scandalous, is that some of these supposedly independent experts conceal their relationship with the industries they are writing about. Now an even more insidious trend is emerging: scientists are signing articles they haven't even written.

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Farmers snub GM-free policy

from Sunday Herald, 14 March 2004

Farmers are likely to ignore requests by the Scottish Executive to ban genetically modified crops, jeopardising attempts by ministers to keep Scotland GM-free.

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Scotland defies Blair and puts block on GM

from Sunday Herald, 07 March 2004

RapeseedThe Scottish Executive will defy the Blair government by rejecting genetically modified crops, which this week will get the go-ahead in England.

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UK GM-free food 'is contaminated'

from Sunday Herald, 29 June 2003
 
Food on sale in Britain labelled "GM-free" has been contaminated with genetically modified soya made by US multinational Monsanto, a new survey by the food safety watchdog reveals.

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Report claims FSA boss 'is pro-GM'

from Sunday Herald, 09 March 2003

The credibility and independence of Scotland's food safety watchdog have been thrown into doubt in the wake of accusations that its top official is in favour of genetically modified food and a friend of big business.

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GM expert warns of cancer risk from crops

from Sunday Herald, 08 December 2002
 
EATING genetically modified (GM) food could give you cancer. That is the stark warning today from one of Scotland's leading experts in tissue diseases.

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Parliament GM adviser 'should resign'

from Sunday Herald, 02 June 2002
 
Environment minister Ross Finnie's senior adviser on GM crop safety faces calls to resign after being accused of overlooking major flaws in a study by GM company Aventis.

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Finnie fights bid to gag GM protesters

from Sunday Herald, 26 May 2002

WESTMINSTER'S plan to remove the right to object to genetically modified (GM) food has been rejected by Ross Finnie, the Scottish parliament's environment and rural development minister, putting him on a collision course with the Blair government.

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Finnie ready to risk career on GM

from Sunday Herald, 26 May 2002

Scotland's embattled environment minister, Ross Finnie, has staked his political reputation -- and perhaps his career -- on his support for genetically modified crop trials.

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Legal block on GM food to be axed

from Sunday Herald, 19 May 2002

THE government has drawn up secret plans to clear the way for home-grown GM foods to go on sale by removing the public's right to object to them.

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Government 'misinterpreting' GM label law

filed for Scottish Daily Mail, 02 June 1999

The government has been criticised by MPs and peers for misinterpreting European law on the labelling of genetically modified (GM) food.

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