Controversy Grows Over Brier Corporate Sponsor Monsanto
Halifax,
Thursday, March 11, 2010 – The corporate sponsor of this week’s Brier,
biotechnology company Monsanto, is under intense scrutiny from environmental,
consumer and farmer groups in Nova Scotia, and across Canada and the
world.
“Many curling fans might be shocked to learn that the Brier
sponsor Monsanto is at the centre of farmer and consumer battles over
genetically engineered seeds and increasing corporate control in farming,” said
Marla MacLeod of Ecology Action Centre, a Nova Scotia-wide environmental group.
“We are saddened that the great Brier championship is now associated with this
relentlessly controversial company,” said MacLeod.
Earlier this year the
Curling Association of Canada signed a multi-year sponsorship agreement with
Monsanto that includes championships through to 2013. Monsanto has sponsored the
Brier since 2006. This week’s Brier runs until Sunday March 14 in
Halifax.
Monsanto is the largest seed company in the world and owns
approximately 86% of all the genetically engineered (GE) seeds sown across the
globe. GE corn, canola, soy and sugar beet (white) are grown in Canada and
Monsanto dominates the market in all four crops.
“Curling is being used
to soften the image of a company that takes farmers in Canada to court for
alleged patent infringement, for saving seeds,” said Lucy Sharratt, Coordinator
of the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network (CBAN). Monsanto now puts farmers
that it sues onto an “Unauthorized Grower List” which prohibits them from buying
Monsanto products in the future. “The Curling Association should not be
providing a platform for Monsanto’s corporate public relations,” said
Sharratt.
Monsanto’s GE seeds are causing havoc for many farmers in
Canada. Saskatchewan organic grain farmers tried to establish a class action
lawsuit to seek compensation from Monsanto and another corporation for loss of
organic canola due to GE contamination. A Private Members Bill – Bill C-474 -
will be debated in the House of Commons on Wednesday March 17, to address the
issue of export market harm caused by GE seeds.
Groups across the country
are engaged in various struggles to stop Monsanto’s GE seeds from harming
farmers’ livelihoods and the environment. Just last week, farm groups and
consumers from across Canada wrote to the U.S. Department of Agriculture to try
to stop the lifting of an injunction on planting Monsanto’s GE alfalfa. “The
release of Monsanto’s GE alfalfa would be an immediate threat to organic food
and farming in Canada,” said Cammie Harbottle, Youth Vice President of the
National Farmer Union and a farmer in Nova Scotia.
“We don’t want the
great sport of curling marred by association with the harm that can be caused by
genetically engineered seeds,” said MacLeod.
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For more
information: Marla MacLeod, Ecology Action Centre,
902 442 1077; Lucy Sharratt,
Canadian Biotechnology Action Network,
613 241 2267 ext.6 or cell
613 263 9511;
Cammie Harbottle, National Farmers Union,
306 652 9465. For background on
Monsanto:
www.cban.ca/Monsanto