No.
25 August 2004
Europeans Balk At Biotech Beer
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, July 8, 2004
Spurned across the continent by food-fastidious Europeans, the biotechnology
industry has turned in its quest for converts to the ultimate ice-breaker:
genetically modified beer.
A consortium of the world's largest biotech companies led by Monsanto
Co. helped fund a Swedish brewer's new light lager that's produced with
the usual hops and barley ‹ and a touch of genetically engineered
corn.
Brew master Kenth Persson hopes to profit from the notoriety his biotech
brew is generating, while biotech companies hope it can gently sway
consumers as European regulators slowly reopen the continent to genetically
altered foods.
But those are tall orders to fill.
A series of food-related health scares in recent years, from mad cow
disease to poisoned poultry, have stoked fears among many Europeans
about so-called GM foods.
Europeans insist that such food be clearly labeled, a vivid contrast
with U.S. consumers, who don't appear bothered that so much of their
processed food includes genetically engineered soy and corn and isn't
labeled as such.
Indeed, most of the European Union's 457 million residents are adamant
about their food being kept free from any sort of modifications, genetic
or otherwise.
And that might help explain why Kenth beer is hardly a barroom hit.
The brewer won't say how many bottles have been sold since the beer
was unveiled earlier this year in Denmark and Sweden. But he says 4,000
bottles are on their way to stores and pubs in Germany and he's in talks
with stores in the United Kingdom.
Although research on GM foods hasn't yielded any nightmare scenarios
about damage to life and limb, Nicholas Fjord of Malmoe in southern
Sweden, is not entirely convinced, either.
Despite reassurances that genetically modified products are safe, an
image keeps popping up in Fjord's mind about a relative whose mother
took Thalidomide in the 1960s because she was assured it was safe.
"So safe, indeed, that he has no elbow or knee joints and, despite
living a good life, has been hindered since his birth," Fjord recalled.
Granted, that's an extreme fear, he said, but one that seems to be strong
in Europe.
A study conducted earlier this year by Finland's National Consumer Research
Center showed that of all the concerns about manufactured food that
Finns have, genetically modified foods topped the list. Some 60 percent
of the population expressed "strong concern," according to
the survey.
In April the EU lifted a six-year moratorium on new biotech food, but
just barely. The previous month, it approved the sale of a modified
strain of sweet corn, grown mainly in the United States. But any food
containing that corn must be labeled as genetically modified.
U.S. farmers argue that the labeling amounts to a de facto ban and the
Bush administration says it will continue pushing its biotech trade
complaint at the World Trade Organization.
And that's where Kenth comes in.
The beer was created because Monsanto felt the biotech debate "never
rose further than the inner circle of scientists, politicians and (nongovernment
organizations)," said Mattias Zetterstrand, a Monsanto spokesman
based in Stockholm, the Swedish capital. "Our wish was to contribute
to this situation by making an abstract discussion more concrete."
The corn in Kenth was approved for use in 1998, before the European
moratorium started, and is grown in Germany. The Monsanto-created corn
seed is spliced with a bacterium's gene to resist the corn borer pest
without the need for insecticides.
Zetterstrand wouldn't say how much the biotech consortium contributed
to the project, but said the companies haven't purchased equity in the
small Swedish brewer and won't share in sales of the beer. The other
companies involved in the project are Bayer CropScience, DuPont, Plant
Science Sweden, Svaloef Weibull and Syngenta.
The brewer, Persson, said he realizes that selling a genetically modified
beverage in the European Union can be a risky proposition especially
when its label touts GM ingredients unabashedly.
Greenpeace activists chased Kenth-laden beer trucks in Sweden and Denmark,
discouraging store and tavern owners from buying the brew, when it was
first introduced, and Greenpeace continues to pressure big grocery chains
to avoid stocking it.
Dan Belusa, a Greenpeace spokesman, said the protest encouraged ICA,
a large Swedish grocery store chain, to remove Kenth from its shelves.
"Basically no GM foods are sold in Europe because consumers and
retailers make a conscience choice to say 'no' to them," he said.
The brewer and Monsanto say Greenpeace's efforts haven't deterred their
plans.
Kenth is now being sold through the Swedish state-owned liquor monopoly,
Systembolaget, in southern Sweden and there have been no protests. But
its availability is limited.
At a recent barbecue in Ingaroe, a small town about a 30-minute drive
from Stockholm, a six-pack of the bottles was offered up for a taste
test. The beer was poured in glasses and offered up.
All in all, everyone who quaffed said it tasted just fine, just like
other beer.
They weren't put off by its label, which proudly denotes its GMO use.
"To me, it's strictly the taste test," said media consultant
Debi Vaught-Thelin. "If the beer is made with GM ingredients and
tastes OK to me, then yes, I will drink it happily."
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