참고자료

[GMO] 미국 버몬트주, 유전자조작식품 표시제 법안 통과

미국 버몬트주 의회가 미국에서 최초로 GM식품에 대한 표시를 의무화시키는 법을
107대 37로 통과시켰다는 소식입니다. 이 법안은 지난 2011년과 2012년에 버몬트주
의회에서 부결된 바 있습니다. 2012년 미국 캘리포니아 주에서도 GM표시제 법안이
몬산토 등 GM 기업의 엄청난 로비에 막혀서 통과되지 못했습니다.

현재  GM표시제가 시행중인 나라는 전 세계 64개국이라고 합니다.
 
버몬트주 농업위원회는 지난 3월  H.112라는 GMO 표시법안을 8 대 3으로 통과시겼습니다.
http://www.addisonindependent.com/201303vt-house-passes-gmo-labeling-bill

H.112는 생산자들에게 유전자 조작된 원료 농산물, 가공식품, 포장 식품에 대한 표시를 
의무화하고 있습니다. 

버몬트주는 미국의 다른 주와 마찬가지로 동물 사료용으로 재배된 작물 대부분이 GM이며,
대부분의 GM식품은 포장 및 가공식품 형태입니다.

그러나 이 법안은 2년이 지나야 효력을 발휘하게 되며, 육류나 유제품은 적용 대상에서
제외되었습니다. 예를 들면, 젖소의 사료로 GMO를 사용하고 있지만, 예외조항을 두어 표시를
하지 않아도 되도록 했습니다. 동물 자체가 유전자 조작되었을 때에만 GMO 표시를 하기로
물러섰습니다.

그럼에도 불구하고 미국내 GM 업계(생명공학 업계)들은 미국 수정헌법 1조를 근거로
버몬트주의 GM 표시법안(H.112)에 대해 소송을 제기할 것으로 예상됩니다.
GM 기업들에게 더 유리한 상황은 버몬트주정부와 의회가 미국 연방정부의 FDA가 승인하지
않은 법을 통과했다는 점입니다.

만일 이러한 소송이 제기되면 버먼트주 정부는 GM 표시 의무화로 인해서 시민들의
건강을 보호할 수 있음을 입증해야  합니다. 다시 말해 입증책임이 GM 기업이 아니라
버몬트주정부에 있다는 의미입니다.




  ===========================


Vermont House passes GMO-labeling law




출처 : http://grist.org/news/vermont-house-approves-gmo-labeling-law/

Members of the Vermont House think shoppers should be told which products contain GMOs.

Shutterstock
Members of the Vermont House think shoppers should be told which products contain GMOs.


A historic but cautious attempt to force food manufacturers to label products containing genetically modified ingredients passed the Vermont House by an overwhelming 107-37 vote last week.


If approved by the state Senate and signed by the governor, the bill, H. 112,  would make Vermont the first state in the nation to require labeling of genetically modified foods.


But the measure likely wouldn’t go into effect for two years, and it would not affect meat, milk, or eggs from animals that were fed or treated with genetically engineered substances, including GMO corn and the rBGH cattle hormone.*


From Vermont Public Radio:



No representatives on Thursday argued against the concept of more transparent food labeling. The most frequent point of opposition voiced on the floor concerned a likely lawsuit from the biotech or food industries that the Attorney General’s Office estimates could cost the state more than $5 million.


Rep. Tom Koch, R-Barre, reasserted that he thinks the state would lose a lawsuit on constitutional grounds. He said the law runs afoul of the First Amendment by compelling speech, and it could pre-empt federal authority under the constitution’s supremacy clause by enacting a law that the Federal Drug Administration has not.


“Nobody else has passed a similar bill. They all seem to be waiting for Vermont to go first and lead the nation,” he said. “What they mean is they don’t want to risk their taxpayers’ money; they want us to risk Vermonters’ money. That is a $5 million to $10 million risk, and one I am not willing to take.”


A ballot initiative that would have required GMO labels in California was defeated last year after Monsanto and other corporations spent nearly $50 million on ads opposing it. A national GMO-labeling bill was introduced recently in Congress, but it has little to no chance of becoming law.


Most of the corn, soy, and sugar beets grown in the U.S. are genetically modified, and they’re widely used in processed foods. But shoppers who want to avoid them have no good way of doing so. Requiring food manufacturers to label genetically modified foods would allow people to say “no” to such products.


Big Ag and its supporters resist labeling, likening informational labels to warning stickers on cigarettes and liquor, saying such labels could “alarm” shoppers. Because activists fighting for mandatory labeling often oppose genetic engineering altogether, GMO supporters dismiss their arguments. Take a recent post on the Discover magazine website as an example (the contributor has previously ridiculed GMO-labeling campaigns, but in this post describes himself as ambivalent on the issue):



The “Right to Know” people … say they just want to know what’s in their food. This is a specious argument. The truth is they think there is something harmful about GMOs. Why else would they feel so strongly about labeling genetically modified foods? Yes, the Just Label it Campaign is couched as a consumer rights issue, but really it’s based on fear. Everybody knows this, so pretending otherwise is silly.


That would mean there are a lot of silly people in the world. As the Center for Food Safety points out64 countries including China, Russia, and all European Union nations currently have GMO-labeling laws in place. Vermonters could be the first Americans to join the trend.


—–


*Correction: Initially this post incorrectly stated that meat and dairy would be exempt from the GMO ban. In fact, the bill would exempt products from animals fed or treated with GMOs, but genetically engineered animals like the AquAdvantage® Salmon would have to be labeled.



John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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