MPs revolt against GM plans By Marie Woolf, Chief Political Correspondent 06 March 2004 Plans for the first commercial GM crops to be cultivated in Britain are irresponsible, MPs said yesterday in a Commons report which said more tests were needed before planting. MPs on the Environmental Audit Select Committee cast severe doubts on the farm-scale trials of GM crops, which have formed the basis for the Government's decision to grant approval for commercial planting of GM maize. They warned that trials of the crop were profoundly flawed and "the results cannot be regarded as adequate grounds for a decision to be taken in favour of commercialisation". A day earlier, the Cabinet agreed to approve the planting of GM maize in Britain, a decision to be announced formally to MPs next week. The MPs' report also raised fears that organic and conventional crops would be contaminated by pollen and GM genes, creating hybrids. John Whittingdale, the Tory agriculture spokesman, said: "Until the consumer can be satisfied that the production of GM crops is based on sound and thorough research, and that a clear framework which tackles liability, contamination and separation is in place, no approvals for commercial plantings should be given." The MPs also warned that a powerful herbicide called atrazine, which is to be phased out in the UK, was used in the trials of the GM maize. But because the herbicide would not be used on commercial GM maize the evidence from the trials was "irrelevant as a benchmark because atrazine has been banned". http://www.gmfoodnews.com/