Wednesday 29th September 1999 GM CROPS: GENETIC POLLUTION PROVED GM Pollen Found Miles from Trial Site Government policy on GM food and crops suffered another shattering blow today after GM oilseed rape pollen was found by scientists four and a half kilometres from an official farm scale trial site [1]. The Government's rules for the farm scale trials require only a 50 metre separation distance between GM crops and other fields [2]. These are the first monitoring results of GM pollen from a farm scale trial. They show GM pollen at distances further than ever previously detected and shows the scale of the threat the trials pose to non-GM crops, beekeepers and the wider environment [3]. The errant GM pollen was found during a GM monitoring and analysis programme organised by Friends of the Earth and Newsnight, around Model Farm, near Watlington, Oxfordshire. The monitoring was carried out by the National Pollen Research Unit and a bee specialist, and the GM analysis was carried out by the Federal Environment Agency in Austria. These disturbing results will severely embarrass the Government on the day of the environment debate at the Labour Party conference. Earlier this month the Government was forced to admit that trials of winter oilseed rape are illegal, after a Court challenge by Friends of the Earth showed that the rules governing consent for such trials had been broken to suit the convenience of biotech giant AgrEvo. The study, which looked at pollen carried by bees and in the air showed that:: . All six bee hives monitored - located at between 500 metres and 4.5 kilometres from the GM crop - were found to contain GM oilseed rape pollen [3]; . Airborne GM pollen was detected at up to 475 metres from the trial site [4]. Charles Secrett, Executive Director of Friends of the Earth, said: "This study shows that genetic pollution from the farm scale trials is already happening. Earlier this month we forced the Government to admit that the new farm scale trials are illegal. This week, we have shown that all the current GM trials threaten local farmers, beekeepers and the environment. This must be the death blow for the whole GM trials programme. Let Tony Blair use the Labour Party conference to announce that it will now be stopped. Nothing less will reassure the public that the Government gives a hoot about the environmental safety of GM food and crops.2 - - ENDS- NOTES TO EDITORS [1] Friends of the Earth contracted the National Pollen Research Unit at University College, Worcester to monitor airborne pollen on roads and public rights of way around the farm scale trial for spring oilseed rape at Model Farm, Pirton, Near Watlington, Oxfordshire in June and July 1999. Access problems (the farmer owned most of the land in the vicinity) meant that permanent monitoring sites could not be set up and therefore spot samples were used. See attached summary. Pollen traps were placed on six bee hives sited in the area of the farm scale trial in June and July 1999. Two were 500 metres from the crop, two were 2.75 kilometres from the crop and two were 4.5 km. The pollen was collected and analysed by a bee and honey consultant , Sarah Brookes, of Evesham, Worcestershire. Newsnight sent six samples of airborne pollen and 6 of beehive pollen were sent to the laboratory of the Federal Environment Agency in Austria for DNA analysis. All six beehive samples were found to contain GM oilseed rape pollen from an AgrEvo variety and 2 out of 6 airborne samples. [2] The Supply Chain Initiative on the Modified Agricultural Crops (SCIMAC) code of practice for growing GM herbicide resistant crops has been endorsed by the UK Government. The maximum separation distance for GM oilseed crops and conventional crops is 50m. For seed crops and organic crops the recommended distance is 200m. [3] Research by the Scottish Crop Research Institute reported at the Gene Flow in Agriculture: Revelence for Transgeneic Crops Conference, Keele University April 1999 (British Crop Protection Council Symposium Proceedings No 72) reported oilseed rape pollen at 4km from a field of oilseed rape. Copyright (c) Friends of the Earth