The world’s largest food corporations
have spent hundreds of millions of
dollars (some of it
illegally) to avoid being required
to label the genetically engineered
ingredients in their products.
But with the July 1 deadline for
complying with Vermont’s GMO labeling
law on the horizon, a handful of the
largest multinational food corporations
have announced they will now label
GMOs—not solely because they will be
forced to, but because as General Mills
claims, they believe “you should
know what’s in your food and how we make
ours.”
Have consumers won the GMO labeling
battle? Have these food companies that
so fiercely fought to keep labels off
their products really split with the
Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA),
the multi-billion-dollar lobbying group
that is still trying to
overturn Vermont’s law in the
courts, and preempt it in Congress?
To be sure, consumer pressure has had an
impact on brands’ decisions to label. We
should celebrate that. But before we
break out the champagne, it’s worth
noting that not all of the food
companies that announced plans to label
have taken a strong position on
labeling. Equally important, four out of
the five companies announced plans to
label after a Senate bill to
preempt Vermont’s labeling law
failed, but before the
Senate has a chance to
come back with an amended version of
the bill after Congress returns on April
4 from Easter recess.
Is there something more to these recent
announcements than just the need to
comply with Vermont’s law? As in, a
strategy to lull consumers into
complacency, while at the same time
forcing Congress to give food companies
what they’ve wanted all along—a free
pass on labeling?
It’s also worth noting that all of the
companies that have revealed plans to
label adamantly defend the “safety” of
GMOs—without once mentioning the fact
that the vast majority of GMO crops,
from which GMO food ingredients are
derived, are sprayed with glyphosate,
classified last year by the World
Health Organization as “a probable human
carcinogen.” Clearly, we have a long way
to go before food corporations
acknowledge the devastating consequences
of the GMO monoculture model on the
environment, human health and global
warming.
Who’s labeling, and why?
Campbell’s Soup Co.
CPB (NYSE),
General Mills (NYSE:GIS), Mars and
Kellogg’s (NYSE: K) and
ConAgra Foods (NYSE CAG) have all
declared they will label GMOs in time to
comply with Vermont’s July 1 deadline,
and in accordance with the Vermont law’s
standards. The companies say
that any costs associated with labeling
won’t be passed on to consumers—a claim
that deflates one of the industry’s
long-standing, albeit routinely
debunked,
arguments that GMO labeling will
lead to higher food prices for
consumers.
Campbell’s was first out of the gate,
and the first to break with the GMA on
the lobbying group’s non-negotiable
stance against mandatory labeling. After
spending
a half a million dollars to help
defeat California’s Proposition 37
ballot initiative that would have
mandated labels, Campbell’s now says the
company supports a mandatory federal
labeling solution. Following Campbell’s
January 1
announcement, we reached out to
clarify what the soup company would do
if Vermont’s law were preempted at the
federal level. A Campbell’s spokesperson
responded by saying that regardless of
what happens in Congress, Campbell’s
products will be labeled, with the words
“partially produced with genetic
engineering,” in all 50 states. On the
surface, that's good news. But let's not
forget that a federal labeling bill
could forbid companies from printing
those, or similar words on a label, in
the interest of preventing food
producers from "stigmatizing"
biotechnology.
Similarly, we reached out to General
Mills, Mars and Kellogg’s this week
asking for clarification on their
positions. Kellogg’s responded, but
wouldn't provide answers to our direct
questions, referring us instead to the
official
statement (which doesn't answer our
questions). We haven't yet heard back
from ConAgra, but we did receive
responses from General Mills and Mars.
When asked if General Mills now supports
a mandatory federal labeling solution,
Mike Siemienas, manager of brand media
relations, told us in an email that the
cereal giant is “supportive of a model
similar to what is used for organic
products.” In other words,
voluntary, not mandatory. Asked if
General Mills would label its GMO
products according to Vermont standards
even if Congress were to preempt
Vermont, Siemienas wrote: “ . . . we
would comply with any law that Congress
passes.” We took that as a no.
But General Mills appears (so far) to
be alone in continuing to side with the
GMA on opposing mandatory labeling laws.
Jonathan Mudd, Mars’ global director of
media relations, told us by email that
Mars, like Campbell’s, supports “the
establishment of a mandatory national
labeling system.” Mudd also confirmed
that Mars will label its products
“consistent with Vermont” regardless of
whether or not Vermont is preempted
“because we believe in consumer
transparency.” (Mars pitched in $376,000
to defeat California’s Proposition 37.
But after anti-labeling food
corporations became
boycott targets following the defeat
of Prop 37, Mars sat out similar battles
in Washington State (2013) and Oregon
(2014).
Campbell’s and Mars both cited the “need
to avoid a 50-state patchwork” of
labeling laws as their reason for
supporting a mandatory federal solution,
as opposed to supporting states’ rights
to pass GMO labeling laws. On the
surface, the patchwork argument might
sound rational—until you
consider the fact that there are
more than 100 state laws,
governing food labeling, including a
Vermont maple syrup
labeling law, and a
Minnesota law governing the labeling
of wild rice. None of these laws ever
created “chaos” in the marketplace, as
U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary
Tom Vilsack has
warned about Vermont’s GMO labeling
law. And none were ever opposed with the
same relentless determination, much less
lavish spending, as GMO labeling laws.
Maybe because none of them affected
Monsanto’s bottom line?
Timing is everything
General Mills, Mars and Kellogg’s all
revealed their labeling plans after
the Senate failed to pass S. 2609, a
bill intended to preempt Vermont. It’s
possible that their announcements signal
that these food giants have conceded
defeat, especially as they all noted the
need to comply with the Vermont July 1
deadline.
That’s the optimistic view. But the
timing of these announcements, made
before the Senate returns to try again
to try to pass a preemption bill, could
also be part of a calculated strategy to
win over more Senators to a compromise
bill, one that will delay or outright
preempt enactment of Vermont’s Act 120.
Sen. Pat Roberts (R-Kan.), sponsor of
the Monsanto- and GMA-funded S. 2609
(dubbed by opponents as the DARK—Deny
Americans the Right to Know Act) is
unwavering in his rejection of any
legislation that requires
labels on GMO ingredients. Though he is
adamant about a “federal solution,”
Roberts outright, and illogically,
rejects the idea of a uniform
mandatory federal solution.
Roberts’ rigid position on mandatory
vs. voluntary cost him the support of
Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), Ranking
Member of the Senate Agriculture
Committee and a key player in the GMO
labeling drama. Stabenow says she would
support a mandatory federal labeling
law, though whether that support would
include on-package labels, or some sort
of
QR barcode scheme or toll-free phone
numbers, both of which have been floated
as alternatives to on-package labels,
remains unclear.
Still, Stabenow and other Senators
representing Big Ag states are under
tremendous pressure (by corporations,
not voters) to keep Vermont’s law from
taking effect. The Big Food corporations
know this. So is it possible that
companies, by announcing, in quick
succession that they will label
voluntarily, hope to send the message
that there’s no need to pass a mandatory
labeling law, because they’ve already
volunteered? And could those big
companies, or at least some of them,
pull the plug on their labeling plans if
federal legislation preempts Vermont?
(Again, Campbell’s and Mars have said
they will proceed regardless of what
happens in Congress—we know that's not
the case for General Mills; Kellogg's
and ConAgra haven't confirmed one way or
the other).
That’s one possibility. Here’s another.
General Mills told Politco’s Jenny
Hopkinson that while the company won’t
pass on the cost of labeling to
consumers, the Minnesota-based cereal
giant will have to spend “millions of
dollars” to comply with Vermont’s law.
Could this “woe is me” message win
enough sympathy votes from Senators who
may still be on the fence (and who are
being hounded by their corporate
donors), that they’ll be persuaded to
betray consumers in order to stave off
what General Mills or other companies
allege is a “huge” financial burden?
It’s also possible that this is just a
public relations ploy by corporations
that are banking on the fact that a
federal law will pass before they have
to label, and that that law will include
restrictions that prohibit them from
printing “produced with genetic
engineering,” or similar wording, on
their packages. That scenario would
allow them to say, gee, we tried to give
consumers what they want, but Congress
wouldn’t allow it.
Whatever the new-and-improved version of the Senate bill morphs into, assuming the Senate passes a bill, it will have to go back to the U.S. House. There, members of a Republican-controlled Joint Standing Conference Committee will try to “reconcile” the Senate bill with the House version, H.R. 1599, which passed the House in July by a vote of 275 – 150. Guaranteed, the House won’t sign off on anything with the words “mandatory” or “on-package.” In fact, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Mike Conaway (R-Texas), according to Politico, “declared just this week that he won't support on-package labeling, which he has said stigmatizes the technology.” Whatever ends up coming out of the committee will have to go back to the House and Senate for a full vote.
That leaves consumers no choice but to continue to hammer our Senators with this message: No compromise. Let Vermont’s law take effect. And if you really can’t tolerate supporting states’ rights to pass labeling laws, then pass a federal labeling law that meets, or preferably exceeds, the standards set by Vermont’s law.
Katherine Paul is associate director of the Organic Consumers Association.
Ronnie Cummins is international director of the Organic Consumers Association.
Copyright © 2016 Organic Consumers Association ·
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