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No Wall High Enough: Nature's Path Has Raised the Bar With Its Third-Party Certified Organic Breakfast Cereals as Concerns Rise With GMO 'Genetic Drift' Contamination.


Business Editors/Food and Health Writers

DELTA, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 10, 2001

Did you know that 60 to 70 percent of all processed foods in America may be made with genetically modified soy, canola or corn?

This is an estimate recently reported by the Grocery Manufacturers of America. More than 65 million acres in the USA, and 6.6 million acres in Canada are planted in GMO GMO
abbr.
genetically modified organism
 crops, according to Scientific American.

Arran Stephens, Founder and President of Nature's Path Foods, a leading manufacturer of organic breakfast cereals, said consumers have a right to know what they are eating. According to a poll of 1,001 adults by the Pew Charitable Trusts Pew Charitable Trusts, philanthropic foundation established (1948) by the children of Sun Oil Company founder Joseph N. Pew (1886–1963) of Philadelphia to provide funds for "general religious, charitable, scientific, literary, and educational purposes. , three-quarters of the respondents wanted to know what foods contain genetically engineered foods. Of this group, roughly 60 percent said they didn't want genetically engineered crops introduced into the food supply.

The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
) is currently debating FDA proposed labeling rules regarding the presence of GMOs in the food supply. It is the FDA's position that the use of "Non-GMO" be phased out as a claim, and replaced with a reference to "No ingredients created with biotechnology."

"The FDA has it entirely the wrong way around," says Stephens. "There should be compulsory labeling of products containing GMO ingredients. Many other countries already have compulsory labeling of GMOs above a one percent threshold."

Using genetic engineering -- virus, bacteria or toxin genes have been added to some varieties of soya and corn. Many scientists and environmentalists have already expressed concerns about the effect of doing this. A major concern for the food industry is that these introduced genes can then contaminate natural crops by pollen drift or mixing during handling.

"We were appalled to see that precisely the genetic pollution we feared is now taking place in America's croplands," Stephens said, as a response to a Wall Street Journal article on Thursday, April 5. He added, "While the products tested were presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 made with non-GMO ingredients, most were not certified organic. To be a third-party certified organic farmer/processor involves following an audited quality rigor not found in conventional methods."

"Genetic drift is the single biggest reason we have been and continue to be adamant opponents of genetic engineering -- there is every likelihood North America's food chain is being irretrievably ir·re·triev·a·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to retrieve or recover: Once the ring fell down the drain, it was irretrievable.



ir
 polluted by genetic experiments," he added. "Even though we buy the purest certified organic corn available, there is still a danger of trace contamination from GE crops. There is no wall high enough to keep out genetic drift."

Stephens explained that both Nature's Path plants in Delta, B.C. and Blaine, Wash. are third-party QAI QAI Quality Assurance International
QAI Quality Assurance Institute (Orlando, Florida)
QAI Quality Assurance Inspection
QAI Quality Auditing Institute
QAI Quantitative Analytics Inc.
QAI Quality Assurance Instructions
 certified, ISO- iso- or is-
pref.
1. Equal; uniform: isobar.

2. Isomeric: isopropyl.

3.
65 compliant organic processing facilities.

"To meet certification standards, we require our raw materials suppliers to be certified organic operations themselves," he said.

"All corn, soy and canola suppliers are required to be tested for the presence of GMOs in every shipment sent to Nature's Path. Anything less than 99 percent pure is rejected. That is our standard. Consumers should be aware, however, that an organic farmer cannot control all outside forces such as water, earth, and wind-borne contaminants. Who should bear the cost of genetic trespass?" he asks. "Shouldn't the responsibility rebound on the biotech companies which caused it in the first place?"

"In addition to supplier testing, we're now doing our own tests of all corn and soy deliveries to ensure our consumers get what they expect," added Parimal Rana, manager of the company's Quality Assurance Department.

Stephens added, "we are asking for a moratorium on GMO crops. Until that time, mandatory labeling of GMO foods is a must, so consumers know what they are eating, and choosing. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
 we will be sending our bills for this expensive testing directly to the biotech companies who have caused this environmental problem."

Nature's Path's organic breakfast line consists of Optimum(TM) Power Breakfast(TM), Heritage(R) Multigrain Flakes, Multigrain with Raisin, Millet Rice Flakes, Corn Flakes FJS FJS Franz Josef Strauß (German politician) , Heritage(R) O's, Heritage(R) Flakes, Heritage(R) Muesli mues·li  
n.
A mixture of usually untoasted rolled oats and dried fruit, often used as a breakfast cereal.



[German dialectal, diminutive of German Mus, mush, from Middle High German
, Blueberry blueberry, plant of the large genus Vaccinium, widely distributed shrubs (occasionally small trees) of the family Ericaceae (heath family), usually found on acid soil. They are often confused with the related huckleberry.  Almond Muesli, Honey'd(TM) Corn Flakes, Honey'd(R)Raisin Bran, Mesa Sunrise(R), Kamut(R) Krisp, Shredded Oaty Bites(TM), Shredded Heritage(R) Bites, Crispy Rice(TM) Hemp Plus(TM), Flax Plus(R), Soy Plus(R) and EnviroKidz(TM) organic children's cereals, i.e. Gorilla Munch(TM), Orangutan-O's(TM), Koala koala (kōä`lə), arboreal marsupial, or pouched mammal, Phascolarctos cinereus, native to Australia. Although it is sometimes called koala bear, or Australian bear, and is somewhat bearlike in appearance, it is not related to true  Crisp(TM), Amazon(TM) Frosted Flakes, and Panda Puffs(TM). The EnviroKidz line donates 1% of its annual sales to charities (WWF See Windows Workflow Foundation. , ACT, OFI) protecting endangered species and habitat.

Founded in 1985 by Arran Stephens, Nature's Path Foods owns and operates QAI-certified processing facilities in Delta, BC, and Blaine, WA. North America's best-selling brand of organic and all-natural breakfast foods are marketed under Nature's Path and LifeStream, respectively. Visit our website: www.naturespath.com
COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Apr 10, 2001
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