Dear Netters,

Ini  informasi tentang pembatasan penanaman jagung
hasil rekayasa genetika di USA. Sementara di
Indonesia, sedang di uji lapang.

EPA Restricts Planting of Biotech Corn 
By Cat Lazaroff 

WASHINGTON, DC, January 17, 2000 (ENS) - The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced
unprecedented new restrictions on the planting of
genetically modified corn. The measures are intended
to reduce the risk that the modified crop could cause
ecological disruptions, harm non target species like
monarch butterflies, and lead to increased pesticide
resistance in insects. 


The new EPA rules were detailed in letters to biotech
seed producers sent last week by Janet Andersen,
director of EPA's biopesticides and pollution
prevention division. 
Corn modified to produce the Bt toxin, which combats
pests like European corn borers, has been criticized
because of studies suggesting pollen from the biotech
corn could kill harmless butterflies and moths. Bt
corn uses a gene from the toxic soil bacterium
Bacillus thurigiensis to produce a substance toxic to
some insects. The same toxin is used in some
conventional chemical pesticides. Some scientists warn
that exposing insects to low levels of Bt toxin in
corn pollen could lead to super-pests resistant to the
toxin. 
Effective immediately, farmers who wish to plant Bt
corn must plant 20 percent to 50 percent of their
acreage with conventional, unmodified corn. The
conventional corn must be planted in structured
refuges that could provide some protection for
insects, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
says. In addition, farmers must undertake additional
monitoring in their fields "as an early warning system
to detect any potential resistance," according to the
EPA. 
In certain limited geographic areas, particularly
where Bt corn could harm threatened or endangered
butterflies, the EPA will order additional
restrictions on sales and planting of the modified
crop. 
The new requirements could be costly for farmers, and
may lead to a decline in orders for Bt corn seed.
However, "the industry has agreed to the Agency's
conditions," the EPA said Friday, in announcing the
new measures. 
Bt corn was approved for sale in 1996, and has seen
booming sales ever since. In 1999, more than one third
of U.S. corn acres were planted with Bt corn. 

In May 1999, researchers at Cornell University
released a laboratory study showing that pollen from
Bt corn can kill monarch butterflies. That raised
fears that the corn pollen could blow from planted
fields into nearby meadows, dusting milkweed plants -
the sole food of the monarch butterfly caterpillar. No
field studies have yet confirmed that Bt corn poses a
risk to monarchs outside the laboratory. 
However, the potential risk to the butterflies
highlights a problem with Bt corn and other modified
crops: studies of their impacts have largely been
performed in the laboratory or on small test plots. No
one is quite sure how they may affect insects in the
real world. 
In December, the EPA put out a call for further
studies to determine how toxic Bt corn may be to
species like the monarch and the endangered Karner
Blue butterfly. Protocols for these studies are due in
March 2000 and the data is due in March 2001. 
On Friday, the EPA suggested to the corn industry that
farmers should voluntarily plant their required
conventional corn refuges upwind of their Bt crops, to
prevent Bt corn pollen from blowing onto these fields.

The EPA wants large refuges of conventional corn to
reduce the evolutionary pressure that Bt creates on
insects. The agency hopes the refuges will delay the
evolution of Bt resistance in pest populations.
Farmers will not be allowed to spray conventional
insecticides on the refuges, unless they can
demonstrate that insect pests have exceeded certain
levels. 
Both biotech seed producers and farmers will have to
monitor insect populations for the emergence of
insecticide resistance, the EPA says. At the first
sign of such resistance, sales of the new seed
varieties will be halted. 

Seed producers must develop agreements for farmers to
sign stipulating the new EPA rules, and produce
educational materials and programs to ensure
compliance with the rules. Details of these plans must
be submitted to the EPA for approval by January 31. 
Last week, Reuters news agency conducted a straw poll
of 400 farmers at the annual meeting of the American
Farm Bureau Federation. The news agency found that
some farmers are planning to stop planting any biotech
crops. Faced by pressure from U.S. consumers for
labeling of genetically engineered food products, and
rejection of all modified ingredients by European
consumers, farmers are finding they cannot make a
profit on engineered crops. 
Even a partial planting of modified crops can make a
farmer�s entire corn crop unsalable in Europe. As
conventional corn planted next to modified Bt corn may
take up some of the toxin, much of U.S. corn now tests
positive for Bt, and will be rejected by overseas
buyers. 
The Reuters poll predicts a 24 percent decline in
plantings of Bt corn compared with 1999, and a 26
percent decline in plantings of Bt cotton. 

The results also predict a 15 percent decline in
RoundUp Ready soybeans - a modified variety of soy
that makes the plants more tolerant of the Monsanto
weed killer RoundUp - and a 22 percent decline in
RoundUp Ready corn plantings. RoundUp Ready soy was
planted on more than half of all U.S. soy acres in
1999. 


Tuti H.


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