Thanks to all of you for being here.
Not too long ago we had testimony before committee by Dr. Ian Mauro from the University of Saskatchewan. In his testimony he said that he had done a project involving 2,500 farmers across the three prairie provinces. He asked them what their concerns were in regard to the technology. I'm just going to bring up some points from his speech and ask you to comment on them. He said:
Risks are less well understood, and this is where my research really provides new information. For both genetically engineered canola and genetically engineered wheat, the main risks, ranked in order of importance by farmers themselves, included markets, which were the top risk for farmers. They were concerned about loss of income. They were concerned about problems in the segregation system, that biology would leak into a segregation issue, which would lead to market harm.
We have had that same point given to us by the representative of the Canadian Wheat Board when he spoke, that it was very difficult to contain or separate, especially in bulk handling, genetically modified organisms from non-modified.
Then farmers were concerned about corporate control of agriculture, seeds being privatized, lawsuits. And then he talks about agronomic “volunteers”—in other words, migration of crops across the landscape—and then, of course, it tied in with contamination.
We've recently seen that the United States has approved the release of genetically modified alfalfa. We've seen three organic organizations state that they would have supported that if there was confinement, which is hard to understand.
As you comment on this, I'd like to know if it is really possible to contain any genetically modified crops so that there's no cross-contamination. There seems to be a lot of evidence in regard to alfalfa that it is not. My concern in the way we react to it is that many in the industry say we have to be science-based, although it's often their science.
Dr. Schmitz, you talked about consumer acceptability and producer profitability. Mr. Agblor, you talked about the fact that you folks are watching very closely market acceptance. Is there room for guidelines, developed by government in conjunction with the industry, which is specifically what my bill would target?
I'll leave it there and maybe we can have some comments before we're out of time.
Dr. Schmitz.