Govt suppressing New Zealand’s organic producers
Soil & Health Association of New Zealand (Est. 1941)
Publishers of ORGANIC NZ
MEDIA RELEASE
For:
Immediate Release
Attn: Agriculture and Consumer
Reporters
Date: 2-6-2005
The Soil and Health Association of New Zealand wants to know when the government is going to stop suppressing New Zealand’s organic producers.
Not only is the government holding back serious support to the environmentally sustainable organic sector, but it kicks it in the guts with its attack on the international GE liability provisions of the Cartogena Protocol, said Soil & Health Co-chair and spokesperson Steffan Browning.
Strong liability provisions are essential to safeguarding organic production from GE contamination. Soil & Health had submitted to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade ahead of MFAT’s destructive trip to the Montreal Cartogena talks.
“It is embarrassing to know that the USA puppeteers have the New Zealand knowledge wave government’s support for limited to zero liability for GE. So much for our Clean Green image.”
The Soil and Health Association of New Zealand and BioGro are members of IFOAM (International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements), the principle international organic umbrella group.
IFOAM calls for strict liability to be
imposed for the introduction of GMOs. To insure that the
costs of injuries resulting from defective products are
borne by the manufacturer that put such products on the
market rather than by the injured persons who are powerless
to protect themselves,
strict liability for GMOs is
warranted.
Strict liability ensures that organic farmers
and consumers receive protection from problems of proof
inherent in pursuing negligence, placing the burden of loss
on manufacturers rather than injured parties who are
powerless to protect themselves. IFOAM applauds the
inclusion of a GMO liability regime in the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety, an idea that originated from African
nations and other Third World nations, and is opposed by the
USA
and Canada. [ May 30, 2005 ]
New Zealand has added
to a list of liability options under consideration at
Montreal, ranging from legally binding agreement to a
combination of binding and non-binding agreement.
“NZ
Foreign Affairs added a number 6 – no instrument, that is no
agreement, and that has to be one of the biggest pokes in
the eye to any non GE producer, organic or conventional,”
said Soil & Health’s Steffan Browning.
Environment Minister Marian Hobbs’ knows full well that there are gaps in liability provision and New Zealand has already suffered from GE contamination.
Added to this poke at organic viability is Government’s lack of progress in the funding of the new organic sector organisation Organics Aotearoa New Zealand (OANZ). OANZ is to be the sectors collective voice, something that the government has supported in concept. Now that the structure is resolved, Government money is nowhere to be seen and appears to have been continually tagged to the progress of State Owned Enterprise, Agriquality’s level of involvement in OANZ and the sectors meeting purely commercial models.
Soil & Health had looked to the budget
in hope that the government would do something meaningful
for the organic sector as an example of government
commitment to sustainability in NZ.
Clearly Governments
commitment to sustainability is veneer thin, according to
Steffan Browning.
“While the dairy giants call for even
higher production from over exploited animals and soils, our
rivers and lakes are becoming increasingly polluted, yet
organics has solutions. Government knows this and pays lip
service to the sustainability problems but ignores the real
solution. By giving the new organic sector organisation,
OANZ, a real boost, New Zealands primary production can
begin to address sustainability problems while maintaining
economic viability.
To operate in a truly sustainable way with out fear of GE contamination is surely the desire of most of New Zealand producers and the sooner the better that organics is supported to show the way, said Soil & Health spokesperson Steffan Browning.
ENDS