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US Rice contaminated with GM seed- Japan & EU refuse to import US Crop

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28 Aug 2006, Reuters

US rice farmers sue Bayer CropScience over GM rice

LOS ANGELES, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Rice farmers in Arkansas, Missouri,

Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and California have sued Bayer CropScience,

alleging its genetically modified rice has contaminated the crop, attorneys for

the farmers said on Monday. The lawsuit was filed on Monday in the U.S.

District Court... The farmers alleged that the unit of Germany's Bayer AG

<BAYG.DE> failed to prevent its genetically modified rice, which has not been

approved for human consumption, from entering the food chain. As a result, they

said, Japan and the European Union have placed strict limits on U.S. rice

imports and U.S. rice prices have dropped dramatically. A Bayer representative

could not be immediately reached for comment. U.S. agriculture and food safety

authorities learned on July 31 that Bayer's unapproved rice had been found in

commercial bins in Arkansas and Missouri. While the United States is a small

rice grower, it is one of the world's largest exporters, sending half of its

crop to foreign buyers.

The genetically engineered long grain rice has a protein known as Liberty Link,

which allows the crop to withstand applications of an herbicide used to kill

weeds. The European Commission said on Wednesday the EU would require U.S. long

grain rice imports to be certified as free from the unauthorized strain. The

commission said validated tests must be done by an accredited laboratory and be

accompanied by a certificate. Japan, the largest importer of U.S. rice,

suspended imports of U.S. long-grain rice a week ago. The U.S. Department of

Agriculture and Food and Drug Administration have said there are no public

health or environmental risks associated with the genetically engineered rice.

The United States is expected to produce a rice crop valued at $1.88 billion in

2006. U.S. rice growers are responsible for about 12 percent of world rice

trade. Three-fourths of the crop is long grain, grown almost entirely in the

lower Mississippi Valley. California, the No. 2 rice state, grows short grain

rice.

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