GMO GEOPOLITICS: THE UKRAINE BUCKS GMOs
Ms.
M.W. sent this article and I include it in this week's blogs, reviews,
and speculations because I found in it a small measure of hope. The
story concerns GMOs, and The Ukraine:
What
surprised me here is, of course, the history and relationships that
emerged prior to and during the Maidan crisis and the US-sponsored
overthrow of the legitimate government of The Ukraine and its
replacement by the Proshenko crowd. Many people, however, may not recall
that in the run-up to the crisis, various American "agribusiness"
giants, like Mon(ster)santo, acquired ports rights on the Black Sea, and
viewed The Ukraine - the traditional breadbasket of Europe - as a ripe
new market to infuse with GMOs. From one point of view, the Ukrainian
government could be viewed as the puppet and creature of the US State
Department, of Darth Soros and his various NGOs(Non-Governmental
Organizations), and the GMO giants.
Meanwhile,
as we also know, across the border, Russia has all but banned GMOs
completely in that country, and has become an agricultural exporter. I
have called this "GMO geopolitics," as various nations realize the value
of the growing opposition to GMOs in various countries, and position
themselves to meet and address that market need.
Well, The Ukraine now appears to be set to play some GMO politics of its own:
Despite massive pressure from U.S. multinational Monsanto and the Ukrainian Grain Association, Ukraine’s Parliamentary Committee on Agrarian Policy and Land Relations supported a new moratorium Monday on genetically modified (GM) crops until 2023.Earlier in 2016, the Petro Poroshenko Bloc “Solidarity” MP, Mikola Lyushnyak entered a Bill to the Ukrainian Parliament to continue and strengthen the current moratorium on GM crops in the country.
“Why is the prohibition of GMOs so acutely on the agenda in society? Because so far there is no definitive scientific evidence proving the necessity of growing GM crops and also no evidence about the safety of GMOs or their usefulness to human health,” Lyushnyak stated.“In Ukraine, which occupies a leading position in the agricultural sector, there is a good chance to become a GMO-free country… in the near future,” Lyushnyak concluded.The Ukrainian Parliament will vote on the moratorium on a date which is yet to be announced. The strong Bill would ban the growing of genetically modified crops as well as production, processing, circulation, transit and import of GMOs capable of reproduction or transmission of hereditary factors.
And note, The
Ukraine's measure, according to the article, is being phrased precisely
in terms of the global market, vs "pressures from (where else)
Washington":
Ukraine’s non-GMO corn varieties have also made it China’s No. 1 source, helping to turn the former Soviet breadbasket into a global player. The fear is that the growing GMO contamination levels will now endanger this new and growing market. (Emphasis added)
Note
also that the argument of Mr. Lyushnyak, sponsor of the bill, is
arguing that there is no evidence "proving the necessity of growing GM
crops," a new addition to the usual basket of arguments against GMOs,
which tend to focus attention on the safety, rather than the necessity
of growing them. The "necessity" argument was advanced usually in
conjunction with "increased productivity" arguments and "feeding the
hungry," and thus Mr. Lyushnyak's wording here is intriguing, for it
suggests that perhaps he has followed recent Western studies, including
some from American universities, which demonstrate falling per
acre yields of GMOs over time, as compared to normal seeds, while costs
actually rise over the long term. One important study that suggested
these trends was recently done by the University of Iowa.
There's
something else going on here, however, and I hope you noticed it: Mr.
Lyushnyak's argument is very similar to language used in the debates on
GMOs in neighboring Russia, and very similar to the language of the
Russian agricultural ministry and its various spokesmen in their non-GMO policies.
And
this brings me to some very high octane speculation: there is, of
course, no love lost between The Ukraine and Russia for a variety of
reasons: the forced collectivization of the kulaks under the Soviets,
and the resulting famines and genocides being one. But it is
interesting to watch market forces driving both nations to take similar
stances vis-a-vis the GMO issue, and that might, with time, become a
basis on which to rebuild bridges. After all, I cannot imagine that
Ukrainians right now are thinking that US corporate dominance, or being
puppets for Washington, has worked out any better than being puppets for
Moscow, and agriculture is that nation's chief strength. Time will tell
of course, but it is an intriguing convergence... http://gizadeathstar.com/2016/11/gmo-geopolitics-ukraine-bucks-gmos/
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