London (18th
April 2006) – The wider environmental impacts of changes to the way
that crops are grown are considered in two new reports published recently.
The studies follow up the Farm Scale Evaluations (FSE) programme which examined
the environmental effect of genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops.
The report by the independent Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment
(ACRE) considers the future development and regulation of new agricultural
technology and practices.
Defra has also published a report that puts the FSE results in the wider context
of other GM crop trials that have been undertaken, both in the UK and abroad.
It goes on to consider the broader changes that have taken place in UK arable
farming over the past century, especially its intensification over the last
50 years and the associated decline in such species as farmland birds.
The review highlights various issues for consideration, including:
* the importance of maintaining biodiversity within arable fields, and the
balance between effective weed control on the one hand and levels of biodiversity
on the other;
* the need for agreed standards by which to judge the impact of GM crops or
other changes in arable production on the farmed environment.
Environment Minister Elliot Morley said: "Changes in farming practice
have impacted on biodiversity, but it is clear that farmers are increasingly
aware of the wider environmental effect of their work. Environmental conditions
linked to CAP payments as well as the strong take up of environmental stewardship
schemes, with 1.7m hectares of English countryside under environmentally friendly
management, will have a positive impact on farmland wildlife.
"The GM trials gave a real insight into how weed control regimes, in
both conventional and GM crops, can affect biodiversity within fields. This
raises a general question about the environmental impact of changes in arable
farming."
"I would like to thank ACRE for their contribution to this debate. This
is an important topic and both of today's reports will help us to consider
it further, by putting the FSE results in the broader context of the long
term changes that have already taken place in UK agriculture."
Other work is also in progress that directly addresses the wider point raised
by the FSE results of the environmental impact of changes in crop production
(whether conventional or GM). Defra is funding a research project that aims
to set out a detailed framework for assessing potential indirect effects on
the farmland environment of novel crops or cultivation practices. The outcome
of this project will further contribute to Defra's policy thinking in this
area.
Sources:
1. New reports highlight need to consider environmental impacts of changes
to farming practices. DEFRA (March 17, 2006) (http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/2006/060317b.htm)
2. Gene crops merit cost-benefit analysis – report. Reuters
(17th March, 2006) (http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-03-17T061346Z_01_L16174033_RTRUKOC_0_UK-FOOD-BRITAIN-GMO.xml&archived=False)
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