GM Watch
  • Main Menu
    • Home
    • News
      • Newsletter subscription
      • News Reviews
      • News Languages
        • Notícias em Português
        • Nieuws in het Nederlands
        • Nachrichten in Deutsch
      • Archive
    • Resources
      • GM Myth Makers
      • Gene Editing
      • Non-GM successes
      • GM Quotes
      • GM Myths
      • GM Firms
        • Monsanto: a history
        • Monsanto: resources
        • Bayer: a history
        • Bayer: resources
      • GM Booklet
      • GM Book
    • Contact
    • About
    • Search
    • Donations
News and comment on genetically modified foods and their associated pesticides    
  • News
    • Newsletter subscription
    • News Reviews
    • News Languages
      • Notícias em Português
      • Nieuws in het Nederlands
      • Nachrichten in Deutsch
    • Archive
  • Resources
    • Non-GM Successes
    • GM Myth Makers
    • Gene Editing
    • GM Quotes
    • GM Myths
    • GM Firms
      • Monsanto: a history
      • Monsanto: resources
      • Bayer: a history
      • Bayer: resources
    • GM Booklet
    • GM Book
  • Donations
  • Contact
  • About
  • Search
SUBSCRIBE TO REVIEWS

INTRODUCTION TO GM

GMO Myths and Facts front page.jpg

GENE EDITING MYTHS, RISKS, & RESOURCES

Gene Editing Myths and Reality

PLEASE SUPPORT GMWATCH

Donations

If you like what we do, please help us do more. You can donate via Paypal or credit/debit card. Some of you have opted to give a regular donation. We greatly appreciate that as it helps place us on a more stable financial basis. Thank you for your support!

China rice contamination confirmed

  • Print
  • Email
Details
Published: 11 August 2005
Twitter

EXCERPTS: Chuk Ng, general manger of GeneScan's operation in China, said it had found gene-altered BT rice in samples collected from the Chinese city of Wuhan as well as the southern province of Guangdong, threatening to contaminate the Chinese rice market.

"I believe this GMO rice is widely spread at least in the middle or southern parts of China," Ng told Reuters by telephone from the northern Chinese city of Dalian. "Once contamination has spread out, it's there. You cannot put it back." [Dr Chapela would agree!]

Ng said the biological testing specialist, headquartered in Germany and majority-owned by Eurofins Group in France, had examined many rice and seed samples for almost one year in China.
------

Unapproved GMO rice found in China -- GeneScan
Reuters, Aug 11, 2005
http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2005-08-11T152138Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-212333-1.xml

HONG KONG (Reuters) - GeneScan, a global tester of genetically modified organisms in food, said on Thursday gene-altered rice is being sold in parts of China, even though Beijing has not approved its commercialisation.

But a spokesman in China's agriculture ministry said the government was not aware of any such cases.

Chuk Ng, general manger of GeneScan's operation in China, said it had found gene-altered BT rice in samples collected from the Chinese city of Wuhan as well as the southern province of Guangdong, threatening to contaminate the Chinese rice market.

"I believe this GMO rice is widely spread at least in the middle or southern parts of China," Ng told Reuters by telephone from the northern Chinese city of Dalian. "Once contamination has spread out, it's there. You cannot put it back."

GeneScan's comments echoed views of Greenpeace officials who said earlier this year that their employees were able to buy rice and rice seeds modified to contain the bacterial gene, Bacillus thuringiensis, which kills pests.

Greenpeace has also warned that the discovery showed the unapproved variety of grain was spreading across China and that it could find a way to markets overseas.

China is testing several strains of GMO rice, including BT rice, and is expected to grant approval for the commercialisation possibly as early as this year.

Ng said the biological testing specialist, headquartered in Germany and majority-owned by Eurofins Group in France, had examined many rice and seed samples for almost one year in China.

Asked if the BT rice posed any food safety risk, the biologist said: "They may prove it is safe for human consumption. But the problem is it is not yet approved in China." (Additional reporting by Lucy Hornby in Shanghai)

Menu

Home

Subscriptions

News Archive

News Reviews

GM Book

Resources

Non-GM Successes

GM Myth Makers

GM Myths

GM Quotes

GM Booklet

Contacts

Contact Us

About

Facebook

Twitter

Donations

Content 1999 - 2025 GMWatch.
Web Development By SCS Web Design