Vancouver conference to promote genetically engineered trees for fuel
Corn ethanol and similar "first generation" biofuels are now widely seen as a failure because they do not reduce greenhouse gases but are, according to the World Bank, the major cause of the food crisis. Industry is promising so-called "second generation" biofuels that critics say promise to be an even greater danger to the environment.
"Corporations are taking this chance to portray their technologies as a solution to global warming and the energy crisis," said Sharratt. "Monsanto is using the food crisis to re-hash their old, false promises to feed the world." [3]
U.S. based ArborGen, the world's leading GE tree company, will present at the conference today.
"The use of crops and trees for biofuel will quickly exacerbate global warming," said Josh Brandon, Greenpeace agriculture campaigner. "Already there are more forests around the world being destroyed to make way for monoculture plantations of trees and crops for fuel."
CBAN claims this corporate push to use GE trees for biofuels is the main reason why Canada pushed to stop an international moratorium on GE tree plantings at the UN this year. There is a strong international movement to ban GE trees, which are projected to increase deforestation of native forests through expanded monoculture tree plantations.
"We want no part of this nightmarish future where trees are genetically engineered to fill our gas tanks," said Tony Beck of the Society for a GE Free BC. "The B.C. government should immediately legislate a ban on planting genetically engineered trees on crown land."
The BC Ministry of Forests currently states that, "the Branch has ensured that no genetically modified tree seed has been registered or used in operational forest planting on crown land." [4]
For more information, please contact:
Lucy Sharratt, Coordinator, Canadian Biotechnology Action Network/STOP GE Trees Campaign, 613-263-4708
Josh Brandon, Greenpeace agriculture campaigner, 604-721-7493
Tony Beck, Society for a GE Free BC, 604-671-2106
Notes to Editor:
[1] Biofuels are more commonly referred to as "agrofuels" by critics.
[2] see "GE Trees, Cellulosic Biofuels & Destruction of Forest Biological Diversity":
[4] http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hti/grm/generesource.htm
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