| 'GM Free' Labels Approved in Germany |
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| Written by Kiki Hubbard | |||||
| Tuesday, 19 February 2008 | |||||
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German shoppers will soon see new labels in the marketplace that make it easier to avoid genetically engineered ingredients. Already, the European Union (EU) requires the labeling of ingredients derived from transgenic crops, labels like "produced from genetically modified soya." Although this practice drives many in the U.S. food industry crazy, especially those who export to Europe, these labels have long been the envy of the 90 percent of consumers in the U.S. who want GE ingredients labeled. Because FDA believes GE food does not differ from conventional food (it stands by a "substantially equivalent" policy), labeling of GE ingredients in the U.S. is not required, which is curious: GE products are similar enough to their conventional counterparts to not require labeling in the marketplace, but unique enough to deserve a patent.
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It's true what our moms said...we are what we eat. In fact, it's truer than they thought. What I eat doesn't just affect me anymore, it affects all of us.
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