http://www.flexnews.com/pages/5097/Germany/GMO/rice/germany_says_found_illegal_gmo_rice_us_china.htmlBerlin, Oct 4 - German consumer protection authorities said on Wednesday that they detected the presence of banned genetically modified (GMO) rice from the United States and China in various food products.
The German tests, carried out by ministry for environment and consumer protection in the state of Hesse in central Germany, revealed that 11 samples from eight different food products carried trace amounts of LL Rice 601 from the United States.
Five samples from three different products showed the unauthorised Chinese Rice BT 63.
No GMO rice is allowed to be grown, sold or marketed in the European Union's 25 countries, where consumers have a reputation for mistrust of GMO foods. GMO food manufacturers, however, insist that their products are safe.
In August, the EU tightened requirements on U.S. imports to prove the absence of LL Rice 601, developed by Germany's Bayer AG.
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China has its brands too
California rice industry nervous about GMO contamination 1,600 miles away
http://westernfarmpress.com/news/08-25-rice-nervous-GMO/The California rice industry has twice staved off major controversies over genetically modified (GM) rice on its own turf only to find itself justifiably nervous today with the discovery of GMO long grain rice contaminating commercial conventional, stored rice more than 1,600 miles away.
The discovery of the long grain GMO rice in bins of commercial rice storage in Missouri and Arkansas drew a swift response from Japan, a major California rice customer. Japan banned long grain rice imports from the U.S. immediately after USDA announced the discovery. The discovery also sent rice futures plummeting.
However, the California rice industry exhaled a big sigh of relief when Japan’s announcement banning U.S. long grain rice imports excluded medium and short grain rice, the exclusive rice types grown in California’s 500,000 acres of rice paddies.
Tim Johnson, president of the California Rice Commission, said California grows a very small percentage of long grain rice, but it is all sold domestically.
“Ninety-five percent of California’s production is medium and short grain rice,” said Johnson. About 50 percent of California’s rice crop is exported annually. The same percentage holds for all U.S. rice.
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