Farmers and anti-GMO groups call for Competition Bureau review of Monsanto takeover
Concerns that buyout could decrease choice in the marketplace for farmers and consumers
A Canadian farming federationand an anti-GMO networkare separately calling on the federalCompetition Bureau to review the possible implications of Bayer's$66-billion US takeover of seed giant Monsanto.
"Our position right now would be for the Competition Bureau to really examine what the impact is going to be and making sure that there's fair pricing and competition in the marketplace," said Ron Bonnett, president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture.
As two of the world's biggest agriculture companies, Germany-basedBayer and U.S.-based Monsanto would control about 90 per cent of the canola seed market in Canada if theyconsolidate, Bonnett said.
Monsanto, headquarteredin St. Louis, Mo., has for years been painted as anevil corporation by groups opposed to thegenetically modified organisms (GMOs) andpesticidesit manufactures. The company is one of the largest producers of seeds in the world, including many genetically engineered varieties, and makes the weedkiller Roundup.The genetically engineered seeds are resistant to Roundup, so farmers can get rid of weeds without affecting their crops.
Most farmers andscientists credit GMOs with producinghigher-yielding, more sustainable crops, but opponents are concerned there could bedetrimentalhealth orenvironmental effects some of which, they say, may not yet be known.
"This merger could further increase the price of seed, decrease choice in the marketplace for Canadian farmers, and stifle research and development," says a Sept. 15 submission to the Competition Bureauby theCanadian Biotechnology Action Network, a group of 17 organizations with "serious concerns about genetic engineering in food and farming."
The call for a competition review is "foremost a concern over the immediate impacts on farmers, but there is a broader impact throughout the food chain globally," said Lucy Sharratt, co-ordinator of the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network.
"If there are fewer seed suppliers and if the seed market is dominated by a few multinational corporations who do have investments large investments in genetic engineering, the question for consumers becomes also, will that mean fewer non-GMO choices in the grocery store?"
Seed prices the issue for farmers
Bonnett emphasizedthat the agriculture federation's sole concern about the Bayer-Monsanto mergeris the "competition aspect" and not about GMOs, which are widely used in Canadian canola, corn, soybeanandsugarbeet crops.
The issue of seed pricing, he said, has a "direct impact on the farmers," but "from a consumer's perspective, I'm not sure at this point there would be that much toworry about."
"The only impact would be on consumers if, all of a sudden, seed costs went quite a bit higher and that translated into higher costs for the commodities that were produced," Bonnett said. "But I don't see that as a major concern right now, because usually what happens is [if] seed cost goes up, the price is set in the marketplace and farmers might have to eat some of their profits."
Bonnett said he has already started to "hear rumblings" of anti-GMOgroups using the news of the Bayer-Monsanto deal to start reigniting the debate about genetically engineered food.The Canadian Federation of Agriculturehopes tocontinue communications withconsumers about new farmingtechnologies that include, but also extend beyond,GMOs, he said.
Public unaware of GMOs
Mike von Massow, associate professor of food agriculture and resource economics at the University of Guelph, said even if Bayergets rid of Monsanto's name in the takeover, he's not sureit would change "the discussion of genetically modified organisms in food at all."
"It takes sort of one of the big bogeymen out of the marketplace, but the reality is the technology is still there and the people who care about the technology both positively and negatively understand that," von Massow said.
"Monsanto was a convenient whipping boy to a significant degree but the people who don't like them will still be out there saying, 'This product is genetically modified,'" he said.
Many consumers don't actually know which productsare genetically modified, as there is no requirement for GMO labellingin Canada.
"To a large degree I don't think most people have an idea of how much of the food we eat is already genetically modified," von Massow said.
An estimated 60 to 70 per cent of processed foods on our grocery store shelves containingredients that come from genetically modified plants, von Massowsaid.
"It's my belief that it's not that people have made a conscious choice that it's OK, it's just that they're blissfully unaware," he said.
Still, even if GMO labelling regulations were applied in Canada, von Massow believes for many people, it would make no difference, partly because theyare already overloadedwith decisions to makearound food, including calorie counts and sodium levels.
"The people ... that are really concerned about it, they will go out and seek out the options and they will look at the [GMO] labels," he said. "For the people who say it's not a big deal, [they] might look at the labels and buy something that's cheaper that is genetically modified.
"But for the greatsort of mass in the middle they just don't have the time to think about it," von Massow said.
Clarifications
- An earlier version of this story said that Monsanto manufactures pesticides and herbicides. In fact, a herbicide is a form of pesticide.Sep 30, 2016 12:37 PM ET
With files from The Associated Press