[THS] Historic Genetically Modified Crop Case
The Harder Stuff in news and commentary
ths at psalience.org
Thu Jun 24 14:45:36 CEST 2010
http://www.truth-out.org/monsanto-opponents-both-claim-victory-historic-genetically-modified-crop-case60678
Monsanto, Opponents Both Claim Victory in Historic Genetically Modified Crop Case
Tuesday 22 June 2010
by: Mike Ludwig, t r u t h o u t | Report
photo
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Manuel W., swanksalot)
In a landmark case on genetically modified (GM) crops, The US Supreme Court ruled
7-1 on Monday in favor of agribusiness giant Monsanto and overturned a lower
court's decision to ban the company's GM alfalfa until the US Department of
Agriculture (USDA) fully analyzed the crop's potential dangers.
Monsanto applauded the decision and assured farmers that the alfalfa seeds, which
are engineered to be resistant to Monsanto's glyphosate-based Roundup herbicide,
could be available for planting as early as this fall. Monsanto's opponents, however,
claim they won the day because, under the high court's ruling, the GM alfalfa
remains illegal until the USDA officially deregulates the crop, a decision that can be
challenged by the public.
A coalition of organic farmers and environmentalists sued the USDA in 2006 over its
approval of the Monsanto's GM alfalfa. The groups cited concerns that the alfalfa
could cross-pollinate and infect organic alfalfa farms, and the overuse of Roundup
herbicide could contaminate soil and groundwater while promoting the growth of
Roundup-resistant "super weeds."
Monsanto and its biotech allies jumped in to support the USDA, but, in 2007, a US
District Court in San Francisco ruled the USDA failed to address these concerns and
placed a nationwide ban on the alfalfa seeds until the department completed a full
environmental impact analysis.
Justice Clarence Thomas was an attorney for Monsanto from 1976 to 1979, but he did
not recuse himself from the case. Monsanto claims the company was not involved in
biotechnology or the "seed business" at the time, according to a release in response
to the movie "Food, Inc."
In his minority opinion statement, sole dissenter Justice John Stevens acknowledged
the lower court's findings that the alfalfa could "contaminate" other plants and
argued that the court did not abuse its discretion by placing the temporary ban.
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer did not participate in Monsanto v. Geertson
Seed Farms because his brother, US District Judge Charles Breyer, made the initial
ruling to ban the alfalfa.
An appeals court upheld the ban, so Monsanto took the case to the top. The
company announced in March the completion of a nearly $200 million expansion of a
chemical plant in Louisiana that manufactures the Roundup Ready herbicide.
The Supreme Court's ruling overturned the lower court's injunction because it was
legal "overkill," according to the Center for Food Safety (CFS), Monsanto's lead
opponent in the case.
"The bottom line is that the Supreme Court set aside the injunction because the
vacating of the commercialization decision already gave us all the relief we needed,
by forbidding RRA [Roundup Ready Alfalfa] planting until a new decision is made by
the agency," CFS senior attorney George Kimbrell said in a release. "And at such
time, farmers and consumers still have the right to challenge the adequacy of that
process."
"The Court's decision affirmed that the threat of genetic contamination of natural
plants posed by biotech crops is an issue of significant environmental concern now
and in the future," Kimbrell said.
The case has been remanded to a lower court with the instruction to allow the
USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to make an interim
decision and decide if some GM alfalfa can be planted while the USDA completes a
full environmental impact statement.
"This is exceptionally good news received in time for the next planting season.
Farmers have been waiting to hear this for quite some time," said Steve Welker,
Monsanto's alfalfa business lead. "We have Roundup Ready alfalfa seed ready to
deliver and await USDA guidance on its release."
The USDA, however, indicated during the case that the full deregulation is about a
year away and interim deregulation will not be pursued, according to the CFS.
Organic food is the fastest growing sector of the food industry, and any move to
deregulate GM alfalfa will be challenged, according to the CFS. More than 60
businesses, organizations and individuals supported the CFS case against the
Monsanto's alfalfa, including the attorneys general of California, Oregon and
Massachusetts, who filed a brief emphasizing "the States" interest in protecting its
environment and natural resources
The majority opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, upheld the public's right to
challenge future deregulation: "In sum ... the vacatur of APHIS's deregulation
decision means that virtually no RRA (Roundup Ready Alfalfa) can be grown or sold
until such time as a new deregulation decision is in place, and we also know that any
party aggrieved by a hypothetical future deregulation decision will have ample
opportunity to challenge it, and to seek appropriate preliminary relief, if and when
such a decision is made."
In a brief filed in the Supreme Court supporting CFS, the Union of Concerned
Scientists argued that genetically modified crops and their herbicides pose
"substantial risks of harm to the human environment" because of their potential to
spread unwanted genes to surrounding fields and promote herbicide resistant weeds.
The brief states that both events are "likely" and the harm would be "irreversible."
Past reviews by the Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection
Agency found Roundup Ready alfalfa to be safe, according to Monsanto. The
company claims Roundup Ready alfalfa was planted by 5,500 growers before the
2007 ban.
More information about the THS
mailing list