Los Angeles Times

‘Non-GMO’ labels sowing confusion

Critics push back amid dispute over health effects

- By Geoffrey Mohan

Clover Sonoma dairy has long cultivated an image as an unconventi­onal alternativ­e for trend-conscious foodies in the Bay Area.

The Petaluma processor was among the first dairies to ban growth hormones — now virtually absent from the national dairy herd. It also was a West Coast leader in adopting organic feeds nearly 20 years ago.

So it may have been fitting that Clover Sonoma jumped into the accelerati­ng trend of labeling products as free of geneticall­y modified organisms, or GMOs — which some consumers fear could cause health and environmen­tal damage — even though a modified organism eaten by a cow wouldn’t show up in the company’s milk anyway.

In April, the first half-gallons of milk from cows that ate no GMO feed rolled off Clover Sonoma’s production lines and right onto a metaphoric shelf shared with GMO-free kitty litter, salt and condoms.

“It’s really trying to market a distinctio­n without a difference,” said Jim Mulhern, president of the National Milk Producers Federation, whose members produce half the nation’s milk.

The federation launched a “peel back the label” campaign this summer, aimed squarely at a growing list of dairy products like Clover Sonoma’s GMO-free milk.

“It’s like unicorn-free milk,” said Alison L. Van Eenennaam, a UC Davis animal genomics scientist. “There aren’t any GMOs in milk anyway.”

Already, Mann Packing, a produce company in the Salinas Valley, more than 140 miles south of Clover Sonoma’s headquarte­rs, opted this month to remove its GMO-free labeling, saying it causes confusion about products that never were modified in the first place.

“We don’t want to perpetuate the

fear,” said Gina Nucci, the company’s director of marketing. “Nothing that’s grown in Monterey County is geneticall­y modified.”

Marcus Benedetti, chief executive of Clover Sonoma — which was known until this year as Clover Stornetta — said the non-GMO move was consistent with how the company brands its dairy products, which have certificat­ions for humane treatment of animals and sustainabl­e practices.

Surveys showed consumers wanted GMO-free milk but did not want to pay the premium price of organic milk, which can reach $8 a gallon, Benedetti said.

And voters had made their views on the issue clear by banning cultivatio­n of GMO crops from nearly every coastal county from San Francisco to Oregon.

“Absent perfect informatio­n, consumers wanted an alternativ­e,” Benedetti said. “And their expectatio­n was that Clover would deliver that alternativ­e.”

Since the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the first geneticall­y modified enzyme in the early 1990s, environmen­talists have expressed fear of unforeseen consequenc­es on health, biodiversi­ty, the agricultur­al economy and food supply.

Agribusine­ss giants have modified crops such as corn, soy, cotton, canola, alfalfa, sugar beets, Hawaiian papaya, a squash variety, some potatoes, an apple variety and even a salmon. They have given these foods traits nature didn’t bestow on them — such as enhanced resistance to insects, disease, drought, decay and chemical herbicides.

Crafting plants that more readily tolerate the same herbicides these companies also manufactur­e has been a flashpoint among consumers, who see GMOs as emblematic of an increasing­ly industrial­ized food chain controlled by a handful of companies.

But health claims about GMOs have been strongly discredite­d by scientists, some of whom accuse the largely left-leaning environmen­tal movement of engaging in the same kind of contrarian opposition as those who doubt climate science.

The American Medical Assn. and National Academy of Sciences have said there is no evidence that currently marketed GMOs are any less healthy than their alternativ­es.

Environmen­tal and foodsafety advocates argue that consumers nonetheles­s have the right to know if their food contains GMOs or ingredient­s derived from them, such as the oils, sugars, starches and emulsifier­s that are ubiquitous in processed foods.

Sixty-four countries have enacted GMO labeling requiremen­ts. In the U.S., Vermont began enforcing label requiremen­ts last year, while efforts for a similar law are underway in several other states, including California, where a ballot initiative failed last year.

A federal labeling effort ended last year with a compromise that has yet to be implemente­d by the FDA — embedding GMO informatio­n in bar codes on food products.

Meanwhile, the nonprofit Non-GMO Project, based in Bellingham, Wash., has put its butterfly emblem on 43,000 products, with annual sales of more than $19 billion. It verifies products based on the source crops — the grass and grains cows eat, or the soy that becomes lecithin.

“When something is labeled non-GMO, it isn’t about the presence of detectable DNA or protein,” said Michael Hansen, chief scientist of Consumers Union, which vetted the Non-GMO Project standards.

“Look, there’s sugar from engineered sugar beets,” Hansen said. “There isn’t any detectable DNA in them, but that’s still derived from genetic engineerin­g.”

Hansen says orange juice fortified with vitamin C — produced via a fermentati­on process based on corn — could be considered a GMO food.

That approach has resulted in non-GMO labels on kitty litter, Himalayan pink salt and waters (coconut, flavored and “alkaline,” in particular). Also, condoms. Even Jeff Hollender, cofounder of Sustain brand condoms, found it hard to explain why his New Yorkbased company’s prophylact­ics, made of latex derived from sap from a rubber plant, bear the seal of the Non-GMO Project.

“What we’re having certified is that neither the sap nor any of the 12 other ingredient­s, which are a variety of different chemicals, are GMO,” Hollender said.

Asked what chemicals are GMO, Hollender said, “I’m not a chemist.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? CLOVER SONOMA dairy in Petaluma produces a line of milk that does not contain geneticall­y modified organisms. A campaign to “peel back the label” targets a growing list of dairy products labeled as non-GMO.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times CLOVER SONOMA dairy in Petaluma produces a line of milk that does not contain geneticall­y modified organisms. A campaign to “peel back the label” targets a growing list of dairy products labeled as non-GMO.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? PRODUCTION at the Clover Sonoma dairy plant in Petaluma includes milk labeled as not containing geneticall­y modified organisms.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times PRODUCTION at the Clover Sonoma dairy plant in Petaluma includes milk labeled as not containing geneticall­y modified organisms.
 ??  ?? “CONSUMERS WANTED an alternativ­e,” said Marcus Benedetti, CEO of Clover Sonoma. “And their expectatio­n was that Clover would deliver that alternativ­e.”
“CONSUMERS WANTED an alternativ­e,” said Marcus Benedetti, CEO of Clover Sonoma. “And their expectatio­n was that Clover would deliver that alternativ­e.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States