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U.S. needs national GMO standards: Richard Guebert

Illinois Farm Bureau President says state-by-state laws would create problems

By Diego Flammini
Assistant Editor, North American Content
Farms.com

President of the Illinois Farm Bureau Richard Guebert says national GMO labeling laws are needed to prevent widespread uncertainty.

According to the Pantagraph, during a news conference at the Illinois Farm Bureau office in Bloomington, Guebert said allowing each state to design its own labeling laws would “be just basically utter chaos, confusion and a logistical nightmare for the manufacturers and food industry.”

"If we are going to feed nine billion people by 2050, we need to use all the production reseources and technology we have."

GMO

Guebert isn't alone in his support of national GMO labeling requirements.

At the same news conference, U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis said that science has provided evidence showing the safety of GMOs and the issue isn't about safety, but marketing.

The debate on mandatory national vs. state-by-state voluntary GMO labeling stems to a bill introduced by Kansas Senator Pat Roberts.

His bill, S.2609, would’ve allowed states to create different labeling practices, but it was blocked on March 16 after it narrowly failed to receive the 60 necessary votes.

Vermont is currently on the clock as the state is set to put its GMO labeling law into effect on July 1.

One main issue with states created their own labeling laws is that farmers may be forced to overhaul their planting decisions based on what’s being grown, who it’s being sold to and consumer concerns.


Trending Video

Crop duster agplane flying action Conger Minnesota Air Tractor Bell 206 Jet Ranger Airailimages

Video: Crop duster agplane flying action Conger Minnesota Air Tractor Bell 206 Jet Ranger Airailimages

It's summertime in Minnesota as a yellow Air Tractor agricultural application aircraft -- a crop duster -- responds to the control inputs of its pilot in a low-altitude dance just above the tops of the cornstalks. Enjoy! And we found a Bell 206 Long Ranger spray helicopter perched on a support truck at the edge of the cornfields, and launching from there. In our video, you can occasionally hear the rotor sounds of the crop-dusting helicopter as we see the yellow Air Tractor in a nearby field.