Headlines
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USDA Releases Final Organic Rule |
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released its final rule for
implementation of the National Organic Program (NOP). A decade in the
making, the rules are a prime example of a private-public partnership.....
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Starlink - Biotech Corn in Question |
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In the face of strident protests, the Environmental Protection Agency
today met with scientists to help determine if a variety of animal
feed corn should be approved for human food......
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Mad Cow: The BSE Crisis in Europe |
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Moving to calm growing fears over mad cow
disease, the European Union today voted its most drastic
measures yet to try to control the spread of the fatal illness.....
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Anti-Biotics on the Farm: NYTimes |
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One of the most striking patterns in modern American
agriculture is the increasing use of antibiotics as a regular
supplement in the feed and water consumed by cows, pigs and
especially poultry......
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A New Restaurant Opened
Torrance, California
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The restaurant located
south of the downtown LA where you can enjoy superb Japanese cuisine run by MLT
management as organic and healthy
food specialist......
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1-1
USDA Releases Final Organic Rule
After a decade in the
works, on December 20th USDA released its final rule for implementation of
the National Organic Program.
WASHINGTON--December
20th, The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released its final rule
for implementation of the National Organic Program (NOP). A decade in the
making, the rules are a prime example of a private-public partnership,
said outgoing U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, Dan Glickman. "We said
that we would deliver standards that could be embraced by farmers,
industry and consumers alike, and we have done exactly that," he
said. "Now it's time to take the next steps to fully embrace organic
agriculture and give it a more prominent role in the farm policy of the
21st century."
Industry members were primarily positive on the final rule. "It's a
bright day in Washington and for the organic industry," said
Katherine DiMatteo, executive director of the Organic Trade Association
(OTA). "The rule is a good, strong regulation and one that will move
the organic industry forward." DiMatteo noted that the rule was not
perfect, and that there are areas the OTA will hope to address, but that
overall it is "quite acceptable.".....
For further
details
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Starlink - Biotech Corn in Question
Greenpeace
website
November 28, 2000
press releases
PROTESTERS
DEMAND EPA NOT ALLOW STARLINK ANIMAL FEED CORN IN HUMAN FOOD EPA to say if
StarLink will be approved after massive contamination of U.S. food supply.
ARLINGTON, Va., - In the
face of strident protests, the Environmental Protection Agency today met
with scientists to help determine if a variety of animal feed corn should
be approved for human food. Activists from Greenpeace, wearing chicken,
cow and sheep masks, gathered outside the meeting around a feeding trough
full of corn and displayed a banner reading, "EPA: Don't Test
Gene-Altered Corn on Us." The genetically engineered corn, called
StarLink, has been allowed to illegally contaminate the U.S. food supply,
leading to the recall of hundreds of popular foods.
"EPA's process is
fatally flawed," said Charles Margulis, Greenpeace genetic
engineering specialist. "Instead of punishing Aventis for illegally
contaminating our food, the agency is on the verge of orchestrating a
corporate bail-out. Industry will never again take any EPA regulation
seriously if the agency lets Aventis off the hook now." EPA
originally allowed Aventis, the biotech firm that developed StarLink, to
sell the seed on the promise that the company would insure that none of
the harvested corn would be used for human food. Despite scientific
concerns about the safety of StarLink, EPA is considering Aventis' request
to retroactively approve the corn in food......
Genetically altered corn
mix-up results in huge mess for U.S. farmers
By MATT CRENSON - The
Associated Press
(All content 2000 The Kansas City Star)
Date: 12/02/00 22:15
Larry Bohlen had just
one item on his shopping list when he went to the Silver Spring, Md.,
Safeway in the summer: corn. Everything Bohlen put in his cart had corn in
it. He tossed in corn chips, corn meal, corn flakes. By the end of his
shopping spree, he had collected 23 products containing corn. It was not a
craving that motivated Bohlen; it was a hunch. He bet he could prove that
a genetically engineered crop not approved for human consumption had
reached supermarket shelves. He took the groceries to his office at the
environmental group Friends of the Earth and packed them into six
cardboard boxes. He then mailed them to Genetic ID, a laboratory in
Fairfield, Iowa. At the lab, technicians methodically crumbled the
groceries into powder and then performed genetic tests worth $7,000.
For
further details
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Mad Cow: The BSE Crisis in Europe
Europe Takes Toughest Steps to Fight Mad
Cow Disease
New York Times
December 5, 2000
By SUZANNE DALEY
ARIS,
Dec. 4 Moving to calm growing fears over mad cow
disease, the European Union today voted its most drastic measures
yet to try to control the spread of the fatal illness. In a special
emergency session, the union's
agricultural ministers voted to ban the use of feed laced with animal
products, not just for cattle but for all farm animals, for at least six
months. In addition, all cattle over the age of
30 months are to be removed from the food chain tested to make sure
they are disease free. As testing capacity is limited, this is likely to
mean that two million head of cattle in the union's 15 member countries
will be slaughtered.
Both measures
are expected to be costly. Union officials estimate that the feed ban ?
intended to prevent cattle from eating, even accidentally, infected animal
parts that can transmit the disease ?will cost nearly $4 billion a year.
The removal of older cattle from the food chain will cost another $800
million, officials said. Evidence of mad cow disease has never been found
in young cattle.
"The
crisis we have to come to grips with is an unusual one," said Franz
Fischler, the European Union's agricultural minister, after emerging from
the nine-hour meeting. "It
needs unusual measures." The measures come as most European countries
have been struggling with a growing panic among consumers about the safety
of beef. Wholesalers in several countries have reported a drop in sales of
nearly 50 percent in the last few weeks......
For
further details
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1-4 Anti-Biotics on the Farm: NYTimes
New York Times on
January 9, 2001
Editorials
One of the most
striking patterns in modern American agriculture is the increasing use of
antibiotics as a regular丂supplement
in the feed and water consumed by cows, pigs and especially poultry. Most
of these drugs are administered in small doses to farm animals not to cure
sickness but to promote more growth on less feed and to prevent the
infections that come with crowding in feedlots and confinement systems.
The practice began in the late 1940's and early 1950's and has accelerated
rapidly. Nobody knows precisely what volume of antibiotics is used today.
But new estimates released by a public interest group this week suggest
that the amount of antibiotics used nontherapeutically in American
livestock has grown to 24.6 million pounds per year, a number that may be
as much as 50 percent higher than it was in 1985.
These figures
appear in a new report on agricultural antibiotics by the Union of
Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit organization based in Cambridge. Mass.
The numbers are alarming for two reasons. First,24.6 million pounds far
exceeds previous estimates. Second, it was a very hard number to arrive at
because the data for antibiotic production and use in humans or animals
are, as the report states, "shockingly incomplete." A trade
group for the makers of veterinary medicines has estimated, for example,
that far more antibiotics
are used in treating human illness than are administered to animals. But
the new estimates find just the opposite that for nontherapeutic purposes,
cows, pigs and poultry receive over all more than eight times the amount
of antibiotics humans receive in the treatment of actual illness.
For
further details
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A New Restaurant Opened
Torrance, California
This new restaurant is located
15miles south of the downtown Los
Angeles where you can enjoy superb Japanese cuisine. It is run by MLT
management with its extensive experiences as organic and healthy
food specialist.
Restaurant
"I-Naba"
20920
Hawthorne Blvd.
Torrance, California 90503
Tel 310-371-6675
Please
click here for details
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(From the Editor:
January 2001)
A Very Happy New Year, the
First Year of 21st Century.
First of all, we wish to express our sincere appreciation of
having you here again in MLT Newsletter and we hope that you
can find informative and valuable news and information at this website, particularly in
organic food business.
In the recent months,
there are a number of issues that are very crucial to our daily
life. It is about foods and their safety. We have highlighted some of
these issues which might be of readers' concern; on positive side, the
U.S. "organic food" industry now finally got a new ruling by
USDA. Mr. Allen Shainsky, who passed away in summer last year, was one of the
most prominent activists in U.S. in leading and steering this
important issue, i.e. a necessity of "organic standards" for a long time and we
are happy
that Allen's lifetime efforts are now to receive its reward. On negative
side topics, the proliferating mad cow disease has shocked many
European nations whilst Japanese government has, in the meantime, taken a
tough measure against biotech corn named Starlink. These issues
stirring a lot of concerns of our on health and food safety in everyday
eating. We hope that this newsletter helps readers understand better
what is happening around the globe.
MLT continues its efforts to keep updates
on relative business information about the industry and hopes to bring
readers with more valuable and interesting information. We target all
our time and effort to "organic" foods so as to keep our
eyes on "healthiness, freshness, cleanness" of our quality
life today. And we always appreciate your support and welcome your
comments and suggestions, thank you.
(Past Issues)
2000 -Dec
-Nov -Sep
-Aug -Jul
-May -Apr
-Mar -Jan
1999 -Dec
-Nov -Sep
-Aug -Jul
-Jun -May
-Apr -Mar
-Jan
1998 -Dec
-Nov
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