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    Categories: 2017

ATP Issues Statement on Monsanto: Keep Armenia Free of GMOs

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
400 W Cummings Park, Suite 3900
Woburn, MA 01801 USA
Tel: (617) 926-TREE
Web: www.armeniatree.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 7, 2017

ATP Issues Statement on Monsanto: Keep Armenia Free of GMOs

In response to news of the US Embassy hosting Monsanto in Yerevan, ATP
founder Carolyn Mugar, director of Farm Aid, a US non-profit that works with
family farmers, invoked the Precautionary Principle: "When an activity
raises threats of harm to the environment or human health, precautionary
measures should be taken even if some cause and effect relationships are not
fully established scientifically." The first endorsement of the principle
was in 1982 by the United Nations General Assembly. This is a good framework
for science, innovation and public policy which the European Union has
adopted, leading it to largely reject GMO crop production.

The agribusiness event in Yerevan presents Armenians with an opportunity to
talk about the future of Armenia, its food and farming. Who benefits from
bringing this company into Armenia? What are the potential environmental,
agricultural and food effects of GMO production? Here are just a few of the
risks and considerations:

. Monsanto's seeds are a threat to biodiversity and native and organic
crops, because consolidation and corporate ownership of seeds threatens
publicly developed seed, genetic research and farmer innovation and
seed-saving.

. Monsanto's pesticides have created superweeds/super pests resulting in
increased use of even more toxic chemicals. 

. Farmers have been pushed out of business and off the land by corporations
like Monsanto due to corporate control of seeds, their required applications
of proprietary pesticides and by failure to take responsibility for the
drift of GMO seeds and pesticides. Also, GMO crops do not necessarily
improve yield or farm profitability.

. Consumer trends are toward increased transparency in our food, including
labeling of GMOs. The contamination of the US food supply with glyphosate,
the result of GMO cropping, is now widely known. Armenia's ability to retain
its agricultural heritage as a GMO-free agricultural producer could result
in important market opportunities.

. The long-term safety of utilizing GMO technology has not been fully
evaluated. Hence the framework of the Precautionary Principle is the
appropriate way for Armenia to determine the future of its farming
practices.

The issue speaks to the value of Armenia's environment. Worldwide the trend
with Monsanto and GMOs is that the harmful effects on the soil, water and
farm profitability are increasingly exposed.

With your support, ATP is working in the remote villages of Armenia for the
long-term benefit of our people. That's what we stand for. We believe in a
strong Armenia with a healthy ecological and economic infrastructure.

Let's be forward looking. Armenia--with its unique history and
character--can seize the opportunity to be a GMO-free country.



Liana Toganian:
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