Hawke's Bay Council is supporting push for GE free status

Council is supporting push for GE status

Hawke’s Bay took one step closer to establishing a genetic engineering-free food status for the region when the Hastings District Council expressed support for the vision, writes Lawrence Gullery of Hawke’s Bay Today. 

Pure Hawke’s Bay presented to the Hastings Council’s long-term plan hearing this week to put its case forward for a GE-free district and the council responded by voting unanimously in support of the proposal.

The council was keen to join Napier in declaring itself GE-free but wanted to take the concept a step further, writing it into its district plan to give it some legal clout.

The idea is to protect the growing soils of the Heretaunga Plains which supports the region’s primary and horticulture economy.

The council was also keen to become a national leader of the GE-free movement rather than wait for the Government to come up with a national policy. Currently only Whangarei is moving in the GE-free direction.

The status would give food producers a point of difference when marketing overseas and put tighter rules around applications for GE crops to be grown in the district.

Pure Hawke’s Bay said it was not “anti-science” but believed research around GE foods should be restricted “to the labs” and not grown out in crops in New Zealand.

Hastings Mayor Lawrence Yule said the move could prevent cases like the one in the Bay of Plenty, where a handful of growers “acted on their own” injecting antibiotics into their kiwifruit trees to avoid the kiwifruit vine disease known as Psa.

“It got quite out of control and now there’s nothing they can do with that fruit. People will try to bring in things illegally to grow but if the GE-free status is in the district plan, the risk becomes a lot greater.”

 

Hawke’s Bay Today, June 7 2012

www.hawkesbaytoday.co.nz/news/council-is-supporting-push-for-ge-status/1408763/