Publication archives

May 2, 2000 / PA News/Reuters Environment group Greenpeace were cited as remaining defiant tonight in the wake of a Crown Prosecution Service decision to seek a re-trial of 28 activists charged with destroying genetically-modified crops.
May 2, 2000 / PA News / Chris Court, PA News Dairy farmers Barry and Mary Symonswere cited as pulling out of the U.K. government's trial of genetically modified fodder maize crop at Portholland on the Roseland Peninsula, near Truro, Cornwall.
April 27/00 / AP/Reuters
May 2, 2000 / The Associated Press / Krishnan Guruswamy NEW DELHI, India -- The Helicoverpa caterpillar that is resistant to pesticides has, according to this story, eaten half the tomato crop in and around the capital as frustrated farmers douse their fields with chemicals in vain.
May 8, 2000 / By PHILIP BRASHER, AP Farm Writer CHICAGO (AP) - Europeans and Japanese don't want gene-altered crops. Frito-Lay, McDonald's and Gerber have rejected them, too. But grocers say American consumers don't seem to care one way or the other - at least not yet.
INGENUITY WITH CURRENT TECHNOLOGY CAN HELP SOLVE THE CONFLICTING DEMANDS OF MARKET, YIELD AND FARM SURVIVAL April 28, 2000 / The Vancouver Sun / Editorial
Tuesday, 2 May 2000 / CSIRO Media Release / Ref 2000/114
UK - The Independent / By Andrea Babbington / 29 April 2000 Heavy spring rain is putting government GM crop trials at risk, researchers claimed today. More than 50 British farmers are preparing to carry out the tests, but BBC1 programme Countryfile found that most had failed to plant their crops because of recent heavy rains.