A collaborative response to GE risks
Councils and communities – a collaborative
response to GE risks
MEDIA RELEASE from Soil &
Health and GE Free Northland
Saturday, June 18,
2016
Whangarei and Far North District Councils received strong support from the community for their proposals to protect their territories from GM releases this week.
The Soil & Health Association of NZ and GE Free
Northland led a group of 14 submitters, presenting their
case at a joint hearing on Whangarei District Council and
Far North District Council’s proposed district plan
changes for the outdoor use of genetically modified
organisms (GMOs).
Soil & Health and GE Free Northland
engaged independent expert witnesses to outline the case for
the precautionary approach to GMO releases that both
councils have proposed for their District
Plans.
“Soil & Health has concerns about potential
adverse impacts of GMO activities on the ability of the
organic sector, tangata whenua and the community to provide
for their social, environmental, economic and cultural
well-being,” said Marion Thomson, co-chair of Soil &
Health. “The proposed District Plan changes provide
practical, commonsense ways of protecting
communities.”
The plan changes would allow
veterinary vaccines that use GMOs to be used without
permits, but outdoor field trials would require council
consent. Releasing GMOs to the environment would be
prohibited for the life of the plans,or until such time as
there is certainty as to how any risks can be
managed.
Discretionary activities (outdoor field
trials) would need to meet certain standards, including
bonds to cover the costs of any unintended economic, health
or environmental damage caused by EPA-approved GE
experiments and the costs of ongoing
monitoring.
"Government agencies have a poor track
record in containing outdoor GE experiments, and the law has
very limited liability provisions for damage,” said Zelka
Grammer, chairperson of GE Free Northland. “The local
community supports a precautionary approach to outdoor GE
experiments, strict liability provisions imposed by local
councils, and an outright ban on the release of GMOs in
their patch, due to the serious risks to our biosecurity,
unique biodiversity and environment.”
Many members
of GE Free Northland are primary producers whose livelihood
is from farming, horticulture, forestry and beekeeping, or
home gardeners, all of whom could be adversely affected by
GMOs.
There is no scientific consensus as to the
potential effects of GMOs on the environment. Irrespective
of the threat GMOs pose to the environment, GMO
contamination risks significant adverse effects on social,
economic and cultural values.
Soil & Health and GE
Free Northland strongly support the right of communities to
decide whether or not GMOs are released or field-trialled in
their regions and, if so, whether any conditions should be
placed on them. This was confirmed by the landmark
Environment Court decision in 2015 that councils have the
power under the Resource Management Act to control the use
of GMOs in their
regions.
ENDS