Houston Chronicle

Decisions to make on GMO labeling

Making changes can cost them money they can’t afford

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

A new law means small and medium-sized businesses must think hard,

NEW YORK — A new law that requires food makers to label the packaging of any products that contain geneticall­y modified ingredient­s has small and medium-sized manufactur­ers facing some big decisions.

Should they try to provide the informatio­n on the label itself, or invest in the technology to add scannable codes? Should they change their ingredient­s to steer clear of such products, and is it worth getting certified as being GMO-free? These are tough questions for companies that may not have financial cushions like bigger businesses to absorb the cost of such changes, which can run into the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars — a considerab­le amount for a small enterprise.

Signed by president

The law, which President Barack Obama signed recently, requires food manufactur­ers and producers to disclose whether products contain GMO components, also known as geneticall­y engineered ingredient­s. Companies can embed the informatio­n in a QR code, the square found on some packaging that is read with a smartphone camera.

GMOs have been the subject of much debate. The government and many scientists say they’re safe, but opponents believe they can be toxic and cause allergies. Although GMOs have become a staple in many processed food products over the past two decades, many Americans may not realize how widespread they are.

Ellia Kassoff, CEO of Leaf Brands, which makes Hydrox cookies and various candies, is concerned about how the public will react to labels that say its food has GMOs — although the bulk of the nation’s corn and soybean crops are now geneticall­y modified.

“It does create this negative feeling with the customer, and I don’t know if the majority of customers in the U.S. fully understand the benefits or non-benefits of GMOs,” says Kassoff, whose company is based in Newport Beach, Calif.

But many consumers don’t read labels that already display nutritiona­l informatio­n like calories, fat and carbohydra­tes, and they might not read or understand labels that mention GMOs, says Alexander Chernev, a marketing professor at Northweste­rn University’s Kellogg School of Management.

“People don’t know if it’s good or bad,” he says. “In the short term, it’s not very likely to change behavior by itself.”

A look at the issues surroundin­g GMOs that small and medium-sized companies face:

A quick primer

A GMO is a plant or animal whose genes have been altered to change how they act or react to the environmen­t. Corn, for example, has been geneticall­y modified to make it resistant to insects and to herbicides used to kill weeds. The Agricultur­e Department estimates that about 90 percent of the U.S. corn crop is modified against herbicides, and about 80 percent is modified against insects.

According to the government, the majority of plants with GMOs are used to make ingredient­s like corn starch and syrup and corn, canola and soybean oils and beet sugar. They’re also used as livestock feed.

Declared safe

The Food and Drug Administra­tion, which regulates food made from GMOs, has declared them safe, and the nonprofit National Academy of Sciences, in a review of almost 900 scientific studies and reports released this year, “found no substantia­ted evidence of a difference in risks to human health between current commercial­ly available geneticall­y engineered (GE) crops and convention­ally bred crops.”

But many groups that oppose GMOs point to studies in the U.S. and other countries that have said food with GMOs can cause some types of cancer or other illnesses. The European Union, relying on such studies, requires GMO foods to be labeled.

The Non-GMO Project, an organizati­on that advocates for the production of more non-GMO food, has said that determinin­g the safety of GMO foods requires studies spanning generation­s.

How much to disclose?

Before the law can take effect, the Agricultur­e Department must write regulation­s spelling out what food companies will be required to do to comply. The USDA has two years to do that.

Kassoff isn’t sure how Leaf will label its packages, simply because the government hasn’t specified what’s needed. Depending on the requiremen­ts and the size of the package — Leaf ’s products include small packets of candies — it might not be possible to fit everything in without using the QR code.

Some companies have decided to stop using GMO ingredient­s rather than risk doubts in consumers’ minds. Others are going further, seeking a certificat­ion from the Non-GMO Project that their food is made completely without GMOs, and getting to use a logo on their packages.

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 ?? Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press ?? Ellia Kassoff of Leaf Brands is concerned about a “negative feeling” with GMOs.
Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press Ellia Kassoff of Leaf Brands is concerned about a “negative feeling” with GMOs.

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