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Tell major grocery store CEOs: Refuse GMO apples - 9/28/2012 3:26:16 PM   
kalikshama


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I bought three varieties of apples at my farm stand this week that were absolutely amazing (Spartan, Cortland, and Greenings.) They taste like an entirely different fruit than New Zealand apples, which I have vowed to never buy again. (I find the same differences in flavor to be true with the bananas I ate in Costa Rica vs bought in the supermarket.)

So I find it interesting that the GMO companies want to make apples even worse, ruining them as food conglomerates have done to fresh tomatoes when they grow them for durability rather than flavor. So in addition to my usual opposition to GMOs, I am opposing the Arctic Apples from a quality standpoint:



Tell major grocery store CEOs: Refuse GMO apples

Millions of apples are packed into our children's lunches every day by parents happy to provide a treat they know is healthy and delicious. But now, for the first time, the USDA could let a safe, popular fruit be replaced by a poorly tested and potentially toxic product from a weird science experiment.

Genetically modified apples that won't turn brown when cut are on a fast-track to USDA approval. They're intended for the fresh-sliced apple market, but could find their way into the produce aisle shelves and into juice, juice-sweetened snacks, applesauce and baby foods, all of which are mostly consumed by children. No labeling would be required.

Tell grocery store CEOs to make it clear that they won't be a market for genetically modified apples or processed foods that use them.

Like other GMO foods, these apples are likely to be approved without any public, peer-reviewed study of their long-term effects. USDA wants to let food producers experiment further on us in its quest to make a minor cosmetic improvement to a fruit intended for mass human consumption.

Apple growers' industry associations representing over 60 percent of commercial orchards have already come out against GMO apples.1 Many are concerned about reduced consumer confidence in the apple market, while some organic growers are concerned that pollen contamination from GMO orchards could endanger their organic certification.2

Consumer advocates worry that these apples will look fresh when they aren't, posing a new food safety threat - a threat no one has to worry about with conventional apples.3 And once they're sold into the food processined-food market, they could end up in any product that uses apples.

As an activist and consumer, you are in a powerful position to pressure leading U.S. grocery stores to reject these genetically modified apples, which may turn out to be toxic for our children.

Tell grocery store CEOs to make it clear that they won't be a market for genetically modified apples or processed foods that use them.

If this unlabeled, potentially dangerous fruit succeeds, it will only be the first of many. If there are long-term consequences to eating genetically modified fruit we won't find out under our current regulatory climate until much too late.

That's why we need to act now, before these apples hit the shelves at our local grocery stores. Tell grocery store owners to keep these mutant apples out of our shopping carts.

Thank you for speaking out.

1. Wenonah Hauter, "One Genetically Engineered Apple Spoils the Bunch," The Dr. Oz Show, August 3, 2012.
2. Andrew Pollack, "That Fresh Look, Genetically Buffed," The New York Times, July 12, 2012.
3. Ibid.

Sign the petition: http://www.credoaction.com/campaign/apples_gmo/index2.html

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RE: Tell major grocery store CEOs: Refuse GMO apples - 9/28/2012 3:31:37 PM   
kalikshama


Posts: 14805
Joined: 8/8/2010
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One Genetically Engineered Apple Spoils the Bunch

As of right now, only a few items in the produce aisle are genetically engineered (GE) – some squash, papayas and sweet corn. But pretty soon, we could be seeing GE apples in grocery stores. Since 2003, one company has been testing its GE apples in field trials in New York and Washington – the biggest apple-producing states in the country. And now these apples, engineered not to brown when bruised or sliced, are up for regulatory review by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).

Bacterial and viral DNA are inserted into these GE fruits called “Arctic” apples. They would be available in Golden Delicious and Granny Smith varieties. They are destined for the fresh-cut apple slice processing and food service businesses, with some of the low-grade Arctic apples going into juice. According to the company’s petition, they “see Arctic apples replacing regular apples at the retail level.” The company also expects to see a $120 million return on Arctic apple varieties within the first 10 years of commercialization.

But this new GE apple isn’t even supported by trade organizations such as the US Apple Association or the Northwest Horticulture Council. Both of these organizations sent USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack a letter in March 2011 urging him not to allow the GE apple in the United States due to the potential marketing harm that would occur to apple growers and marketers. The British Columbia Fruit Growers Association is also concerned about the effects that these GE apples will have on the traditional apple market and on consumer confidence in apples at the grocery store. Even the top sliced apple company is concerned about the food safety ramifications of these Arctic apples that will appear to be fresher than they really are.

Some of the concerns raised by these apples include:

- Nearby organic or traditional apple orchards may be contaminated with pollen from GE apples.
- The quality of the apples may be masked by its non-browning appearance and mislead consumers into - thinking they are fresher than they really are.
- Commingling of GE apples at the processing level could lead to contamination of non-GE fruit slices or juice
- Without a label, consumers may unwittingly purchase and consume Arctic apples.

Are all of the risks really worth it for an apple that resists a minor aesthetic flaw? Millions of research dollars have been put into this product so that fast food and processing companies can let sliced apples sit around in plastic bags for longer.

Although the company claims they will label their apples with an Arctic apple sticker and indication of its “non-browning trait benefit,” there is no requirement for them to do so, and since there is no required labeling of GE products, they will not be responsible for telling the public that their product is genetically engineered.

As the saying goes, one bad apple spoils the bunch. And this could be that apple. Which is why we’re asking the USDA not to approve the GE Arctic apple for commercialization in the United States. Here's our petition if you'd like to join us.

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Curious about the "Sluts Vote" avatars? See http://www.collarchat.com/m_4133036/mpage_1/key_/tm.htm#4133036

(in reply to kalikshama)
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