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Cost of coexistence in Germany. Maarten Punt, Technische Universität München. Introduction. Statement of the EC (2003): “In principle, farmers should be able to cultivate the types of agricultural crops they choose – be it GM crops, conventional or organic crops” In the same document:
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Cost of coexistence in Germany Maarten Punt, TechnischeUniversitätMünchen
Introduction • Statement ofthe EC (2003): “In principle, farmers should be able to cultivate the types of agricultural crops they choose – be it GM crops, conventional or organic crops” • In the same document: “to provide European consumers with a real choice between GM and non-GM food"
Introductionctd • In ordertopreventoutcrossingandadventitiouspresence -> Coexistencemeasures • BUT: • Different Coexistencemeasures = different costs • Different Coexistencemeasures = different effectiveness • Free choice = C.M. should not tipoverthebalance! • Case study in Germany
GM cultivation in Germany • GM cultivation = outlawed • GM cultivation 2005-2008: Bt maize • # farmers involved = ±90 • Area wise <1% of total maize area in Germany • Obligatory registration @ government
German cultivation in 2008 Standortregister, http://apps2.bvl.bund.de/stareg_visual_web/data.do
Sampling strategy • Approached former Bt farmers through registration office • Approached former Bt farmers through Innoplanta (farmers organisation) • Approached neighbours through Bt farmers • Face to face interviews • Total Sample Size: 47 farmers. 27 Bt, 20 non-Bt
Distribution Not sampled 1-4 farmers 5-9 farmers 10-15 farmers
Correlationanalysis • Analyse correlationofLikertscalewithfarmcharacteristics (kendall‘s tau, non parametric)
Summary • Small sample, but still sampledroughly 30% of all Bt-farmers in Germany • Results, so far, seemmostlyconsistent • Coexistencemeasuresoverallseem not tobotherfarmerstoomuch • Farm sizeis not always an importantcharacteristic