Rich Duprey
Motley Fool
Sept. 22, 2013
The U.S. wheat industry was nearly brought to its knees after the discovery
of a genetically modified strain Monsanto had tested years ago was inexplicably
found growing in an Oregon farmer’s field. Because most of the rest of the world
rejects GM wheat and the wheat from the Pacific Northwest is mostly targeted for
export, the ramifications of the discovery were massive.
Now it’s deja vu all over again. A Washington State farmer had his alfalfa
crop rejected by a broker after it tested positive for the presence of genetic
modification. The implications for this recurrence are just as profound as they
were for wheat.
Several countries immediately imposed bans on the import of U.S. wheat and an
investigation that’s still ongoing was launched to figure out how a strain of
genetically modified wheat that Monsanto said it completely destroyed except for
the small amount the U.S. government supposedly has under lock and key in its
vaults made it into the wild.
Read more
Sunday, September 22, 2013
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