Posted October 23, 2013
A judge in Mexico recently suspended the planting of
genetically modified corn in the country, citing a risk of imminent harm to the
environment, according to an AgProfessional article available here.
Mexico’s Secretary of Agriculture, Enrique Martinez y
Martinez, told El Economista, that “the agriculture department has always
planned to base its decisions regarding the field testing of genetically
modified corn based on scientific criteria,” but there would be no more
permits.
Mexico banned the planting of GMO crops in 1998, but
the law was modified in 2005 to allow the planting of test plots, by permit
only and with some very rigid rules, according to an article by the Poultry
Site available here.
The judge suspended the field testing permits, which
companies like Monsanto, Pioneer, Syngenta, and Dow AgroSciences are
specifically involved in requesting, to plan test plots.
In July, a coalition of over 50 groups and individuals
filed a lawsuit to stop field trials of GMO corn in Mexico. The plaintiffs argued that they have
scientific evidence from studies that document the contamination of Mexico’s
native corn varieties by GMO corn.
There are about 70 native types of corn in Mexico and
some worry that the native corn could become contaminated if GMO corn is
planted. Corn is also the main food
staple in Mexico, particularly in the central and southern parts of the
country.
For more information on biotechnology, please visit the
National Agricultural Law Center’s website here.
