Monsanto GE Sweet Corn to Hit Walmart Shelves

Eco Watch / News Report
Published: Wednesday 8 August 2012
“The GE sweet corn is the first consumer product developed by Monsanto that will go straight from the farm to the consumer’s plate, rather than first being processed into animal feed, sugars, oils, fibers and other ingredients found in a wide variety of conventional food.”
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Like it or not, Monsanto’s genetically modified sweet corn will soon be arriving on grocery store shelves of the world’s largest retailer, Walmart Stores, Inc., and will not be labeled as such. Despite an onslaught of consumer pressure, the company confirmed late last week with the Chicago Tribune that it has no objection to selling the new crop of Monsanto’s genetically modified (GE) sweet corn.

Other retailers, including the grocery chains Safeway and Kroger, have not responded on the issue, however Whole Foods, Trader Joes and General Mills have all vowed to not carry or use the GE sweet corn. As the country’s largest grocery retailer, Walmart sells $129 billion worth of food a year, giving it unmatched power in shaping the food supply chain.

The GE sweet corn is the first consumer product developed by Monsanto that will go straight from the farm to the consumer’s plate, rather than first being processed into animal feed, sugars, oils, fibers and other ingredients found in a wide variety of conventional food. It is engineered to be resistant to Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide, the active ingredient of which is glyphosate. The product is also designed to produce a Bt toxin that will kill insects that feed on the plant. Monsanto’s new sweet corn is being harvested in the Midwest, Northwest, Southeast and Texas.

“After closely looking at both sides of the debate and collaborating with a number of respected food safety experts, we see no scientifically validated safety reasons to implement restrictions on this product,” Walmart officials told the Tribune.

However, there has been growing concern over the increasing prevalence of insect resistance to Bt crops. Earlier this year, a group of prominent entomologists sent a letter to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) urging caution in the agency’s approach to Bt crops. Additionally, in April researchers at Portland State University found that GE corn modified to express Bt negatively impacts beneficial soil life. Their results reveal a decreased presence of beneficial mycorrhizal fungi, which are important for nutrient and water uptake, in the roots of Bt corn when compared to non-Bt corn. Experts have recently warned EPA that “refugees” of non-GE crops should be increased due to the growing threat of insect resistance to Bt corn.

Furthermore, GE crops present a unique risk to organic growers. Wind-pollinated and bee-pollinated crops, such as corn and alfalfa, have higher risks of cross pollination between GE crops and unmodified varieties. Pollen from GE crops can potentially drift and wreak havoc on both the surrounding ecosystem and for organic and non-GE farms. If organic farmers’ crops become polluted with GE pollen, they may be subject to loss of their organic certification and financial losses. Unfortunately, the burden to protect against genetic drift falls on organic farmers and conventional farmers who do not use GE products.

Labeling GE products is a crucial way to identify products containing GE ingredients in an effort to sway consumer demand. The European Union, Japan, Australia, Brazil, Russia and China, require labeling for GE foods. Earlier this year, the German corporation BASF announced that it would stop developing genetically engineered products targeting the European market, in part due to low consumer demand. Given that 93 percent of Americans support mandatory labeling of genetically engineered (GE) foods, Beyond Pesticides believes that we can have the same impact here as in Europe. Enough signatures have been collected to put on the California ballot Prop 37Genetically Engineered Foods. Mandatory Labeling. Initiative Statute—to require labeling of food produced with GE ingredients, and the industry is now fighting back with a well-funded campaign campaign. More information on the campaign for PROP 37 can be found at the California Right-to-Know website.

However, the only sure-fire way you can avoid the genetically modified food is to buy and support organic. Genetically modified crops are not permitted in organic food production. Researchers are continuing to discover the environmental and health benefits of eating and growing organic food.

Reposted with permission from EcoWatch.org



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23 comments on "Monsanto GE Sweet Corn to Hit Walmart Shelves"

froSTed1030

August 13, 2012 11:20am

It's surprising to see such a poorly investigated article here. We (the human race) have been genetically modifying foods since agriculture was invented. Getting your panties in a wad over such an old and well established (and safe) change in our food is like complaining that there's too many chemicals in a twinkie. These foods are safe, and attempting to add labeling would be like opening up another branch of the government. This would only lead to 2 things. 1. higher taxes to pay for all the investigations into every food on the market and 2. higher food prices to pay for the one or two foods that are "unspoiled by the hand of man". From the banana to the tomato, we have modified foods substantially, this lead to abundance of foods and lower priced foods, even more attractive foods (like the banana). The bottom line is that you have to either have very deep pockets or no sense of agricultural history to promote this way of thinking.

mlane78212

August 10, 2012 2:50am

Just one more reason why I won't shop at Walmart, Costco, Sam's, et al.

CorPARAnoid

August 09, 2012 7:10pm

Ron in NM, Double-check that Silky Soymilk. 1995 was when Monsanto developed the GMO Soybean, 85% of soybeans are GMO. So LABELing is key in identify what is GMO and what is natural/organic Aspartane in Soda is another item, the methanol in the aspartame converts to formaldehyde once heated to 86 degree's. USAF took pilots off it. Military in middle east got SICK because stacks of cola would sit in the sun. It attacks your IMMUNE system, making you more susceptible to your particular DNA weakness/disease. Flouride dummies you down and you become complacent, it also MOLTs childrens teeth. SO BUYER BEWARE is so TRUE. Best to start a Garden and gift a fruit or nut tree to your neighbor. Look into establishing COMMUNITY Gardens.

Rebel with a Cause

August 09, 2012 3:00am

Bon appetit, America! Might be your last dinner so enjoy! What worries me is how those lovely, generous, caring people called corporations are going to make their money once their products have killed all their customers and covered the planet with superweeds!

MrCOTO

August 09, 2012 7:21am

Rebel,

You've hit on the answer to your question without realizing it. They don't want us to live. They want the planet for themselves.

Randy

August 09, 2012 12:30am

The solution is simple BOYCOTT WALMART!!!

Ron in NM

August 08, 2012 9:48pm

Some people say not to shop at Walmart. Well, I wish I had some real alternatives. I live in a small city in New Mexico, and the Walmart SuperCenter has put most of its rivals out of business. Only one lone alternative exists, a Lowe's Super Market, but frankly, it's miles from where I live, whereas the Walmart is relatively close at hand. Well, I won't be buying corn, fresh or canned, from Walmart anymore, but don't ask me to waste time and gas going to Lowe's when I just need a Silk Soymilk, or some Greek Yogurt. Corn's not high on my list of nutritious foods, anyway.

damead

August 08, 2012 7:28pm

This should come as no surprise. They share the same business model: Competing by predation, by crushing competition.

Walmart does it by forcing suppliers to reduce their prices every year until they go bust trying to meet Walmart's quotas (whence Walmart hires a new supplier), and then using those impossibly low prices to put local retailers out of business.

Monsanto does it by marketing patented products that farmers MUST buy from them, rendering them totally dependent (think Dark Ages feudal system); and when their corn contaminates non-GE corn o adjoining farm plots whose owners won't buy their products, SUING those farmers for violating their patent by growing their GE corn.

If corporations are people, these conglomerates are industrial warlords: Well-armed (with lawyers and lobbyists), avaricious, corrupt, blood-thirsty and ruthless. They, along with others including international banks, rule the world.

dwdallam

August 08, 2012 7:08pm

The point I don't understand is that we supposedly have a democracy, and in a democracy, the majority rules, but not to the tyranny of the minority, of course.

What I'm getting at here is that if 93% of our population wants to know when they are eating GMO foods, why are we god damn well not having that choice?

This seems less like a democracy and more like a totalitarian dictatorship.

jtrockit

August 17, 2012 2:16pm

Wrong, we are a representative republic that follow the rule of law. It is not majority (mob) rules...law rules. Unfortunately, by comparison to the population, a very small number of people (politicians) make the laws. Most are Idelogs though that want things their way or the way the special interest groups that elect them want.

MrCOTO

August 09, 2012 7:32am

Welcome to reality. We haven't lived in a democratic/republic for over 100-years.

In addition to this issue, a solid 75% wanted out of the wars for years. The same percentage wants the idiotic "war on drugs" ended. A large percentage wants the job-stealing so-called "free trade agreements scrapped. Gitmo closed. The TSA done away with. The Patriot Act, NDAA, Military Commission Act, all are highly unpopular.

Fact is our elections are a farce, and our government has been taken over by the Central Banks. Right now we're living under a soft tyranny, that's about to turn hard. Real hard.

Cheetara

August 08, 2012 6:42pm

Why does "the burden to protect" fall on the organic farmer's shoulders? It would seem more logical to place that burden on those who create the genetically engineered organism since that organism is outside the earth's standard. If this is based in law, then the law needs to be changed! And soon!

Siobhan

August 08, 2012 1:33pm

Buy summer produce at the Farmer's Market. This will support your local community and most likely is not "Frankencorn."

jeltez42

August 08, 2012 6:06pm

You need to ask what type of corn is being sold and you need to educate yourself as to what types of sweet corn there is. Large scale producers may use Roundup Ready or BT varieties.

Please also understand that Organic does not mean chemical or GMO free.

Robert Taylor

August 08, 2012 5:08pm

I've been to Wally World maybe 3 times in the last 10 years, usually to get a fishing license in another state. This is another good reason for me not to pass through their doors.

LeoK711

August 08, 2012 12:53pm

I'd like to commend the writer(s) at EcoWatch for focusing on the environmental issues with GM plants, and not indulging in any further 'frankenfood' nonsense - which I believe is just tilting at windmills (lamancha) and is largely not backed by science, except possibly for those with true food allergies.

I've never shopped at Walmart in my life, but I might go in and buy some of this corn just to see how it tastes. I have no fear of eating it, because I understand what genetic engineering is and isn't.

Ironically, I think the food companies would be more willing to label GM products as such, except that they've been demonized as "poison"! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot!

Robert Taylor

August 08, 2012 5:12pm

How can you have no fear of eating it when there's multiple studies showing long term problems in people, animals and the plants themselves not including what it may do to other crop species. Demonized, they damn sure should be...

Lamancha

August 08, 2012 11:39am

How to reach the masses is a daunting task, for without labeling, how many mainstream buyers will be made aware of this poisoned produce? It's why this country is relatively depraved with unrestricted gun laws, failure to deal with global warming, allowing all manner of fillers & chemicals in food & vitamins, and now this pernicious monstrosity - which so ironically & tragically, will even spill over to organic farmers. Ideally, picket Walmarts throughout the USA with sentries dressed in skeletal costumes holding up corn & GE paraphernalia, but what chances doing this 24/7- their hours of operation? I guess it all boils down to education and "caveat emptor" ( let the buyer beware ).

jeltez42

August 08, 2012 6:09pm

Please understand that some people have no choice but to shop at Wal-mart for their food. When things can be upto 40% lower than other options and you have $100 to feed a family of 3 for a month, you cannot be picky.

Jeffrey Hill

August 08, 2012 10:25am

Boycott Walmart food until they get with the program and demand labelling of all genetically engineered food. We'll then see how labelling affects buying.

Robert Taylor

August 08, 2012 5:17pm

Boycott Walmart period.

lindy1

August 08, 2012 10:06am

Sure, why not experiment on lower income people ! Isn't that just special !!!!!

Robert Taylor

August 08, 2012 5:19pm

Are you insinuating Mittens and friends are not Walmart shoppers?