A GE-free Prince Edward Island would serve as a precedent for the whole country.
Nearly a decade after the introduction of GE farming in Canada, Prince
Edward Island Premier Pat Binns has initiated public hearings to
examine prospects for a GE-free PEI. The public hearings are of great
interest across Canada. A GE-free PEI would be a guaranteed source of
GE-free food for Canadian consumers. As in the case of labelling in
Quebec, it would set an important precedent for the rest of the
country. Finally, PEI's initiative is a reminder to other premiers,
especially Quebec's Jean Charest, who has promised GE labelling - that
the provinces are fully empowered to assume leadership on the GE issue
on the basis of a precautionary approach. Provinces do not need to wait
for the federal government to act.
Greenpeace
supports a GE-free PEI and presented a brief to the Prince Edward
Island Standing Committee on Agriculture, Forestry and Environment to
encourage PEI to become a GE-free province. Greenpeace recommends the
following measures for PEI to become an authentic GE-free zone:
- Ban GE crops on the island.
- Eliminate GMOs in animal feed.
- Ban GE fish.
- Institute mandatory GE labelling.
- Adopt policies to foster ecologically and socially sustainable agriculture.
- Publicize the GE-free zone and encourage other governments to follow suit.
On December 1, 2005, the Standing Committee recommended that the
government of Prince Edward Island support the use of labelling of food
products, produced or sold within Canada, indicating they contain or do
not contain GM ingredients. To provide consumers with a choice, the
Committee also supports labelling of foods that are and are not
products of genetic modification, and points out that such labels
should be informative, understandable and verifyable. Further, the
Committee believes that the speed at which labelling appears in the
marketplace will be driven by the importance of the issue to consumers
and points out that labelling may provide a producer or processor with
flexibility to accentuate or differentiate their product in the
marketplace and thus provide a market advantage. '
For more information on the Standing Committee go to: http://www.assembly.pe.ca/reports/1-3-62GMOs.pdf