GM crops contaminate
the countryside for up to 15 years after they have been harvested,
startling new government research shows.
The findings cast a cloud over the prospects of growing the modified
crops in Britain, suggesting that farmers who try them out for one
season will find fields blighted for a decade and a half.
Financed by GM
companies and Margaret Beckett's Department of the Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs, the report effectively torpedoes the Government's
strategy for introducing GM oilseed rape to this country.
Ministers have
stipulated that the crops should not be grown until rules are worked
out to enable them to "co-exist" with conventional ones. But the
research shows that this is effectively impossible.
The study, published
by the Royal Society, examined five sites across England and Scotland
where modified oilseed rape has been cultivated, and found significant
amounts of GM plants growing even after the sites had been returned to
ordinary crops. It concludes that the research reveals "a potentially
serious problem associated with the temporal persistence of rape seeds
in soil."
The researchers found that nine years after a single modified crop, an
average of two GM rape plants would grow in every square metre of an
affected field. After 15 years, this came down to one plant per square
metre - still enough to break the EC limits on permissible GM
contamination.
Last night Pete Riley, the director of GM Freeze, said; "It is becoming
clearer and clearer that it is going to be impossible to grow GM crops
in Britain."
GM crops contaminate the countryside for up to 15 years after they have
been harvested, startling new government research shows.
The findings cast a cloud over the prospects of growing the modified
crops in Britain, suggesting that farmers who try them out for one
season will find fields blighted for a decade and a half.
Financed by GM
companies and Margaret Beckett's Department of the Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs, the report effectively torpedoes the Government's
strategy for introducing GM oilseed rape to this country.
Ministers have
stipulated that the crops should not be grown until rules are worked
out to enable them to "co-exist" with conventional ones. But the
research shows that this is effectively impossible.
The study, published by the Royal Society, examined five sites across
England and Scotland where modified oilseed rape has been cultivated,
and found significant amounts of GM plants growing even after the sites
had been returned to ordinary crops. It concludes that the research
reveals "a potentially serious problem associated with the temporal
persistence of rape seeds in soil."
The researchers found that nine years after a single modified crop, an
average of two GM rape plants would grow in every square metre of an
affected field. After 15 years, this came down to one plant per square
metre - still enough to break the EC limits on permissible GM
contamination.
Last night Pete Riley,
the director of GM Freeze, said; "It is becoming clearer and clearer
that it is going to be impossible to grow GM crops in Britain."