| |
|
|
Consumers Evenly Divided Over Environmental Risks
and Benefits of Genetically Modified Food and Biotechnology
Risks Seen As Greater Initially, But Benefits Ranked Higher
Once Information Is Given
The Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology
For Immediate Release
February 4, 2002
Contact:
DJ Nordquist
202.347.9132 (direct) or
202-347-9044 ext. 246
http://pewagbiotech.org
San Francisco, CA - The American public is evenly divided over
whether genetically modified food and other agricultural biotechnology
products hurt or help the environment when given basic information
on risks and benefits, according to a poll released today by the
Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology. The poll, conducted by
Zogby International, was released as part of a panel discussion
hosted by the Initiative titled Environmental Savior or Saboteur?
Debating the Impacts of Genetic Engineering.
Despite a long and often fractious debate about the environmental
risks and benefits of biotechnology between critics and supporters,
a majority of the American public agrees with neither position,
said Michael Rodemeyer, executive director of the Initiative. Initially,
people tend to feel slightly more strongly about the risks of the
technology, but react more positively when additional information
is presented to them. Simply put, it looks like the jury is still
out.
Prior to reading a series of informational statements about the
possible benefits and risks of biotechnology, respondents nationwide
were more likely to say that the risks of biotechnology outweighed
the benefits (40 percent to 33 percent), while 19 percent thought
the benefits and risks were about the same, and nine percent were
unsure. However, after being read a series of questions about specific
environmental risks and benefits (without specifically identifying
which were risks or benefits), respondents were exactly evenly divided,
with 38 percent saying the risks outweigh the benefits and another
38 percent saying the benefits outweigh the risks. An additional
21 percent now said the risks and benefits were about the same,
with the number of dont knows reduced to 3 percent.
Minorities tended to respond differently than whites: after having
been read the statements, whites were significantly more likely
to say the benefits (41%) outweighed the risks (32%), whereas Hispanics
and African-Americans thought the risks outweighed the benefits
both before and after the statements were read. In addition, women
tended to weigh the risks are higher than the benefits, both before
and after the statements were read.
Consumers overall are also generally unaware of the environmental
risks and benefits of genetic engineering, according to the poll.
Only 15 percent of respondents had heard a great deal
about the benefits and 17 percent heard a great deal
about the risks, with 42 percent hearing some about
benefits and 43 percent hearing some about risks. An
additional 32 percent heard not too much about benefits
and 27 percent heard not too much about risks, with
the remaining 10 percent hearing nothing about benefits and 13 percent
about risks.
Consumers felt the most important potential environmental benefits
of genetic engineering are: creating plants to clean up toxic soils
(74 percent); reducing soil erosion (73 percent); reducing fertilizer
run-off into streams and lakes (72 percent); reducing the amount
of water used to grow crops (68 percent); developing disease-resistant
varieties of trees that are threatened or endangered (67 percent);
reducing the need to log in native forests (63 percent); and reducing
the amount of chemical pesticides used (61 percent).
In terms of environmental concerns, consumers ranked the possibility
that genetically modified plants, fish, or trees could contaminate
ordinary plants, fish and trees not intended to be modified as highest
(64 percent), followed by creating superweeds (57 percent)
and increasing the number of insects that may develop pesticide-resistance
(also 57 percent); reducing genetic diversity (49 percent) and changing
a plant, fish or tree through biotechnology so that it might harm
other species (also 49 percent). Changing the ecosystem ranked lowest
of all the risks and benefits listed, at 46 percent.
The list of specific environmental risks on the poll were: drifting
genes, creating superweeds, increasing pest resistance,
affecting non-target organisms, reducing biodiversity, or changing
the ecosystem. Benefits listed were: engineering plants to clean
up toxic waste, reducing soil erosion, reducing run-off, needing
less water to grow crops, saving endangered or threatened species,
reducing the need to log in native forests, or reducing pesticide
use. Asked to rank these 13 items in terms of personal importance,
the environmental benefits scored significantly higher than any
of the risks listed, with the exception of the non-target organism
issue nationally. However, among Californians, all the benefits
outranked the risks.
These poll results were released at a panel moderated by Margaret
Warner, senior correspondent for the PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
The panel, which explored the environmental risks and benefits in
the debate over agricultural biotechnology, included: Charles Benbrook,
an environmental consultant and the former executive director of
the National Academy of Sciences Board on Agriculture; Martina McGloughlin,
Director of the Biotechnology Program at the University of California;
Carl Pope, Executive Director, The Sierra Club; and Peter Raven,
president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
and recently named "Hero for the Planet" by Time Magazine.
The poll, a nationwide survey of 1,214 adults and an additional
407 adults in California, was conducted by Zogby International from
January 14-18, 2002. The margin of error is +/- 3 percent for the
nationwide sample and +/- 5 percent for the California sample.
|