Ursula Lüttmer-Ouazane reportedly told Taz,
Her remarks were circulated worldwide and Reuters interviewed Monsanto corporate spokesman Thomas Helscher who reportedly said,
Before the world opens the champagne to celebrate the death of GMO and its paired herbicides such as Roundup, it is worthwhile to look more closely at what was officially said and what not.
What Monsanto itself says
A visit to the official website of Monsanto Germany presents an official company press release referring to the media statements:
"Aktuell überschlagen sich die Medien mit der Nachricht, dass Monsanto die Vermarktung von gentechnisch verbessertem Saatgut in Deutschland und Europa eingestellt haben soll.
Das stimmt so nicht. Monsanto bietet schon seit einigen Jahren nur dort gentechnisch verbesserte Sorten an, wo ein funktionierendes Zulassungssystem und breite Unterstützung auf landwirtschaftlicher und politischer Ebene für die Technologie vorhanden ist.
Aber grundsätzlich ist es richtig, dass Monsanto sich in Deutschland und Europa auf die Züchtung und Verkauf von konventionellem Saatgut und Pflanzenschutzmitteln konzentriert." [2]
Translated, the essential part says,
"Right now the media
is flooded with reports that Monsanto has stopped the marketing of
GMO seeds in Germany and the EU. That is not correct…" Then on the parent website of Monsanto in St. Louis, the following statement appears:
"We have a robust business selling high-quality, conventional corn, oilseed rape and vegetable seeds to our farmer customers in Europe. We’ve been telling people in Europe for several years now that we’ll only sell biotech seeds where they enjoy broad farmer support, broad political support and a functioning regulatory system.
These conditions apply only to a few countries in Europe today, primarily Spain and Portugal. As Hugh Grant, our CEO told the Financial Times in 2009, ‘Europe’s going to make up its own mind in its own time.’
The only GM trait grown in Europe today is a corn resistant to the European corn borer, an insect that can do considerable damage to crops. Its cultivation accounts for less than 1% of the all corn cultivated in Europe (by hectares)." [3]
Both statements are worth closer attention.
First the German statement is a bit different from the US version. It officially denies as false the press reports that they have ceased marketing of GMO seeds in the EU.
Second, their statement that they concentrate on breeding and sale of conventional seeds and plant protection chemicals is nothing other than a description of what the present status of Monsanto sales in the EU, nothing more. Because of the limited use so far of Monsanto GMO seeds in the EU, Monsanto business by definition is focuses now where it earns money.
However the "plant protection chemicals" Monsanto refers to are primarily its own Roundup herbicide, which by license agreement with farmers must be sold paired with all Monsanto GMO seeds, but is also the number one weed killer sold in Europe and the world. It has also been proven to be highly toxic even to human embryo cells.
The US statement has interesting important differences. First it gives no hint of any change in Monsanto policy towards spreading GMO seeds in the EU. It states explicitly they will continue to spread GMO seeds in Spain and Portugal, both EU countries.
And it cites chairman Hugh Grant, not to be confused with the Hollywood actor, indicating the company expects the EU to come around on allowing its GMO. And it cites the present status of its GMO corn in the EU. Nothing more. No statement of a stop to GMO in the EU.
Suspicious Timing…
Yet for most of the world who don’t have time to research the official statements of Monsanto but merely glance at a Reuters or TAZ headline, the message has been delivered that Monsanto has given up its EU effort on proliferating its GMO seeds.
The timing of the TAZ interview is suggestive of what seems to be a carefully orchestrated Monsanto PR deception campaign.
The TAZ original by writer Jost Maurin appeared on the same day, May 31, less than one week after March against Monsanto, a worldwide protest demonstrations against Monsanto, took place in more than 400 cities in some 52 countries around the world. [4]
The TAZ article that was then used as reference for all world media after, appeared under the emotional and factually misleading headline:
The March against Monsanto was notable in several key respects.
Most alarming for Monsanto and the GMO cartel was the fact that it was the first such demonstration not organized by anti-GMO NGOs such as Greenpeace or BUND or Friends of the Earth.
In Germany where this author participated as a speaker in one of the events, it was all organized by concerned activists via Facebook. But the NGOs who formally oppose GMO were reportedly nowhere to be found as sponsors or even reportedly as active organizers.
That march presented Monsanto and friends with a frightening new element - the danger that that grass roots anti-GMO protest would spread and make life even more difficult for GMO proliferation in Africa, in China, India, Latin America and of course eastern and western Europe.
All indications are that the timing of the well-formulated TAZ interview, notably with a left newspaper openly opposed to Monsanto GMO, was an orchestrated attempt to "manage perceptions" and take the headwind out of the sails of the growing anti-GMO sentiment in the EU and abroad.
For the moment, Monsanto has gained a tactical victory in propaganda points as the broad public takes the retreat at face value.
As one experienced opponent of Monsanto GMO put it, it bears all the hallmarks of a slick PR campaign,
What Monsanto has not done is to recall its already commercialized GMO Maize in the EU, that despite damning independent scientific study of some 200 rats over a two year span showing rats fed GMO maize and Monsanto Roundup herbicide showed dramatically more cancer tumors, higher death rates and organ damage compared with non-GMO-fed rats.[5]
Moreover, Monsanto openly admits it is pushing its way deep into the eastern European market for seeds, though mentioning only conventional seeds.
Monsanto Vice President for International Corporate Affairs, Jesus Madrazo, stated that the company has been focusing on gaining market share in the conventional corn market in Ukraine, and that Eastern Europe and South America are key growth areas for the company now.
Then in the USA, it has leaked out that Monsanto directly worked with its apparent current favorite US Senator, Roy Blunt, a Republican from Monsanto’s home state of Missouri and one of the major recipients of Monsanto campaign finance, to draft for Blunt an obscure paragraph Blunt got into a spending bill, a bombshell that exempts Monsanto from being sued for any damage its crops or chemicals cause.[6]
Called by opponents the Monsanto Protection Act, many members of Congress were apparently unaware that the Monsanto Protection Act was a part of the spending bill that they were voting on.
The Monsanto bill, signed into law by President Obama despite hundreds of thousands of protest petitions not to, essentially gives Monsanto and other GMO purveyors legal immunity, even if future research shows that GMO seeds cause significant health problems, cancer, anything. The federal courts no longer have any power to stop their spread, use, or sales. [7]
The only other corporations in the US enjoying such outrageous legal immunity are the pharmaceutical vaccine makers.
What we have is a quite different picture from the slick spin reported by TAZ and from there picked up worldwide uncritically by mainstream media.
Monsanto by its own open admission has not ceased marketing its GMO products and herbicides in the EU. It has not ceased imports of its GMO soybeans and GMO corn into the EU where it has managed to escape the EU GMO labeling law.
Monsanto also states it is concentrating on building market share in eastern Europe, where often regulators are more "relaxed" and in the notoriously corrupt Ukraine. They do not deny promoting GMOs there either; rather they state positively their focus on conventional seeds only.
Simply put, the geopolitical stakes behind Monsanto and the attempt to control the world’s most vital seeds of life are far too high for the company to raise the white flag of surrender so easily.
A Monsanto precedent There is a relevant precedent for this Monsanto PR deception campaign.
In 1999, after months of growing worldwide anti-Monsanto protest over the fact Monsanto had made a takeover bid to buy Mississippi company, Delta & Pine Land in order to acquire Delta’s patent on a radical new GMO technique known officially as GURTS (Genetic Use Restriction Technology) and popularly as Terminator technology.
Delta has won a
patent together with the US Government’s USDA for
the Terminator. It
would force a GMO seed or plant to "commit suicide" after only one
harvest, forcing the farmer to return each year to Monsanto to buy
new seeds regardless the price or availability. The Terminator image threatened to derail the entire fledgling GMO project at the outset such that Rockefeller University President and GMO financial sponsor, Gordon Conway, president of the Rockefeller 'Foundation', made a rush visit to meet Monsanto’s board and convince them to make what was a tactical retreat in order to limit damage to a very fragile GMO campaign worldwide.
Monsanto announced, deceptively it proved, that it would not pursue "commercialization" of Terminator technology and it dropped its takeover bid for patent holder Delta & Pine Land.
The anti-GMO NGOs claimed a huge victory and nothing was heard for seven years until, with no fanfare, in 2006 Monsanto announced it was acquiring Terminator patent co-holder Delta & Pine Land.
This time there was
scarcely a peep from the anti-GMO lobby. They had lost momentum and
the deal went ahead. [8]
It remains to be seen
if the forces for healthy non-GMO agriculture today prove as
gullible as in 1999.
Notes
New GM Seeds in Europe June 3, 2013 from MarketWatch Website
Ms. Ursula Luettmer-Ouazane said, however, this is nothing new, as Monsanto hasn't applied for growing modified plant varieties in Europe for the past two or three years.
Europe currently accounts for only roughly 12% of Monsanto's global sales of around $13.5 billion.
The St. Louis, Missouri-based
agricultural company raised its full-year outlook earlier this week
for the second time in less than two months, mainly on continued
demand for corn seeds and herbicides.
Monsanto's rivals, most notably,
...have already largely pulled out with genetically modified crops from markets like Germany, as most consumers remain skeptical about the use of these organisms.
BASF announced in January it has given
up seeking approval for genetically modified potatoes in Europe,
after concerted opposition from consumers, farmers and lawmakers.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture said
the wheat found in Oregon fields was the same strain as a
genetically engineered or genetically modified, herbicide-resistant
wheat tested by Monsanto between 1998 and 2005, which was never
approved.
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