This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007
Listen
Farm Scale GM Trial At Daviot, Aberdeenshire
20/06/2000
Minister for Rural Affairs Ross Finnie emphasised today that the control plot of conventional oilseed rape on the Scottish farm taking part in a farm scale GM trial does not pose a risk to public health or environmental safety, despite the discovery that it has been planted with GM material from affected Advanta batches.
The information that the control plot at the farm in Daviot, Aberdeenshire, had been planted with GM material came to light after the Scottish Executive sought further details on where the seed had been planted.
The Minister stressed that the trial crop and the control crop will be destroyed upon completion of the research and will not be marketed. They will not enter the human or animal food chain.
In response to a PQ from Nora Radcliffe, Mr Finnie said:
"I have considered carefully the implications for the future of this site within the trial programme. We have taken into account the views of the independent Scientific Steering Committee which oversees the trial programme and of ACRE, as well as consulting other regulatory bodies and the SCIMAC company involved with the Daviot site. As a result of these extensive consultations, I am satisfied that the validity of the trial has not been compromised and our scientific advisers have confirmed there are no implications for the safety of the surrounding environment.
"It is important to recognise that there is a very pertinent difference between a crop which is grown for commercial purposes and the one which is being grown as part of this trial. In the latter case, both the GM trial crop and the control crop will be destroyed upon completion of the research and will not be marketed. I have been given reassurances which allow me to state categorically that neither of these crops will enter either the human or animal food chain.
"The strict conditions under which these trials are taking place mean that this site will be carefully and rigorously monitored. The separation distances already in place are intended to prevent either crop cross-pollinating with adjacent crops: and any volunteers which appear will be removed and destroyed.
"The contamination of the control crop with a GM variety does not affect the scientific merit of the trial. I must stress that the GM crop itself is not being assessed in these trials - it has been subjected to and passed numerous safety checks before it could be grown as part of the trial. The purpose of the farm trials is to assess the possible impact on the environment of growing a GM crop in commercial conditions and, in particular, using the herbicides necessary to give the GM plant its 'advantage'.
"The herbicide to which the GM variety is tolerant is being used on that GM crop. The conventional crop which is growing alongside is being treated with an entirely different set of herbicides. As the GM contaminant in the conventional crop will not be treated with the herbicide to which it is tolerant, its presence will make no difference to the outcome of the trial. Furthermore, as the GM varieties growing in the two halves of the field are different, it remains possible to identify and measure gene flow from the trial crop.
"The unintentional contamination of rape crops growing throughout the UK is a most unfortunate and highly regrettable incident. We are already working at a UK level to introduce measures which will minimise the possibility of a recurrence. In the case of the contaminated crop which is being grown at the Daviot site, however, the strict controls which are an integral part of the evaluation programme and our regulatory regime ensure that neither it nor the wholly GM crop pose a safety threat to either the public or the environment.
"The Executive remains committed to the UK farm scale evaluation programme as a sensible and precautionary approach which will provide us with the necessary scientific information which is vital to enable a soundly-based view to be reached on the future of GM crops in this country."