Difference between revisions of "ANBio"
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In November 2012 Lucia de Souza and Leila Macedo Oda, who were listed in 2001 as directors of AnBio,<ref>[http://www.powerbase.info/images/4/4a/Book_anbio1.pdf AnBio website], downloaded 2001</ref> had a letter published in the scientific journal Food and Chemical Toxicology, in which they expressed their "serious concerns" about the journal's earlier publication of a paper by G.E. Seralini and colleagues, which they criticised as flawed.<ref>de Souza, L. and L. M. Oda (2012). Letter to the editor. Food and Chemical Toxicology.</ref> Seralini's study had found that rats fed on Monsanto's GM maize NK603 and tiny amounts of the crop's associated herbicide Roundup had increased tumour incidence, mortality, and serious liver and kidney damage.<ref>Séralini, G. E., E. Clair, et al. (2012). "Long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant genetically modified maize." Food and Chemical Toxicology 50(11): 4221-4231.</ref> | In November 2012 Lucia de Souza and Leila Macedo Oda, who were listed in 2001 as directors of AnBio,<ref>[http://www.powerbase.info/images/4/4a/Book_anbio1.pdf AnBio website], downloaded 2001</ref> had a letter published in the scientific journal Food and Chemical Toxicology, in which they expressed their "serious concerns" about the journal's earlier publication of a paper by G.E. Seralini and colleagues, which they criticised as flawed.<ref>de Souza, L. and L. M. Oda (2012). Letter to the editor. Food and Chemical Toxicology.</ref> Seralini's study had found that rats fed on Monsanto's GM maize NK603 and tiny amounts of the crop's associated herbicide Roundup had increased tumour incidence, mortality, and serious liver and kidney damage.<ref>Séralini, G. E., E. Clair, et al. (2012). "Long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant genetically modified maize." Food and Chemical Toxicology 50(11): 4221-4231.</ref> | ||
− | In their letter to Food and Chemical Toxicology De Souza and Oda listed their affiliation as AnBio, though no mention was made in their published letter of AnBio's funders, which | + | In their letter to Food and Chemical Toxicology De Souza and Oda listed their affiliation as AnBio, though no mention was made in their published letter of AnBio's funders, which in 2001 included GM seed developer and trading companies Monsanto, Bayer, Cargill, DuPont, and Pioneer.<ref>de Souza, L. and L. M. Oda (2012). Letter to the editor. Food and Chemical Toxicology.</ref> |
Similarly, Oda was the major source quoted in an AnBio press release disseminated two days after the release of Seralini's paper. The release said AnBio "warned about the dissemination of research developed without appropriate scientific methodology, without statistical significance and elaborated in a rather biased way". | Similarly, Oda was the major source quoted in an AnBio press release disseminated two days after the release of Seralini's paper. The release said AnBio "warned about the dissemination of research developed without appropriate scientific methodology, without statistical significance and elaborated in a rather biased way". |
Revision as of 19:48, 23 November 2012
ANBio is the National Biosafety Association of Brazil. It is funded by the big genetically modified (GM) crop companies, though it does not declare that on its website as of 2012.
Contents
Activities
In November 2012 Lucia de Souza and Leila Macedo Oda, who were listed in 2001 as directors of AnBio,[1] had a letter published in the scientific journal Food and Chemical Toxicology, in which they expressed their "serious concerns" about the journal's earlier publication of a paper by G.E. Seralini and colleagues, which they criticised as flawed.[2] Seralini's study had found that rats fed on Monsanto's GM maize NK603 and tiny amounts of the crop's associated herbicide Roundup had increased tumour incidence, mortality, and serious liver and kidney damage.[3]
In their letter to Food and Chemical Toxicology De Souza and Oda listed their affiliation as AnBio, though no mention was made in their published letter of AnBio's funders, which in 2001 included GM seed developer and trading companies Monsanto, Bayer, Cargill, DuPont, and Pioneer.[4]
Similarly, Oda was the major source quoted in an AnBio press release disseminated two days after the release of Seralini's paper. The release said AnBio "warned about the dissemination of research developed without appropriate scientific methodology, without statistical significance and elaborated in a rather biased way".
Oda was quoted in the AnBio release as saying that "ideological positions can influence quite negatively the understanding of reputable scientific information on GM food, vaccines and even biological medicines produced by modern biotechnology."
The AnBio release said, clearly referring to Seralini's study but without mentioning his name, "ANBio challenges the technical credibility of a questionable French study that casts doubts on the safety of one of the technologies of transgenic corn, which has been consumed by millions of people worldwide for nearly 10 years."[5]
Funding
2001: According to AnBio web pages downloaded in 2001,[6] the organisation's corporate partners (funders) include the following genetically modified crop companies:
As at November 2012, this information is no longer to be found on the AnBio website.
Contact
- Address:
- ...
- ...
- ...
- ...
- Phone:
- ...
- Email:
- ...
- Website: http://www.anbio.org.br/site/
- ...
Resources
Notes
- ↑ AnBio website, downloaded 2001
- ↑ de Souza, L. and L. M. Oda (2012). Letter to the editor. Food and Chemical Toxicology.
- ↑ Séralini, G. E., E. Clair, et al. (2012). "Long term toxicity of a Roundup herbicide and a Roundup-tolerant genetically modified maize." Food and Chemical Toxicology 50(11): 4221-4231.
- ↑ de Souza, L. and L. M. Oda (2012). Letter to the editor. Food and Chemical Toxicology.
- ↑ PRNewswire, Misinformation undermines understanding of scientific development, says ANBio, Sept 21 2012, acc 23 No 2012
- ↑ AnBio website, downloaded 2001