Question
Can GMO plants contaminate seedsfruit of nearby traditional and organic crops by pollination making the next crop not organic?
Submitted by: Joshua Price
Answer
Expert response from Community Manager
Moderator for GMOAnswers.com
Friday, 24/01/2014 12:36
Don Cameron, an organic and conventional farmer addressed this topic in a recent response, an excerpt from his response is included below:
“If GMO traits are found in the organic farmers crop, it is usually up to the buyer of the crop to accept or reject his product based on their contract specifications which does allow for a certain percentage of GMO traits to be present. Organic certification does not equal zero presence of a GMO trait. Low-level presence of a GMO trait in organic production is allowed as long as the grower has followed the organic process necessary for organic production.
There are many ways to have a GMO trait appear in an organic crop other than pollen drift from a nearby neighbor. The planting seed may have been mixed with biotech trait seed, the planter, harvesting equipment, trucks or storage facility may not have been cleaned properly. Pollen from a neighbor is only one of many ways that can affect an organic grower. Organic crops with GMO presence can and are sold as organic; the USDA organic certification does not have a zero policy.
There are different buyers with different contract specifications available to a grower. If for some reason the organic crop could not be sold as organic, it could be sold into the conventional market.
As an organic grower I communicate with my neighbors and use different planting dates or separation to avoid pollination from any surrounding crops whether from my own biotech crops or those of my neighbors. We choose to grow different crops with different cropping systems, organic, conventional and biotech, all on the same farm and without issues of pollen flow from one to the other.”
To view the full response, click here: http://gmoanswers.com/ask/if-i-am-organic-farmer-and-gmo-technology-contaminates-my-crops-do-i-have-any-recourse-how-do-i.
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