Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

20
Essen Heute LucerneMinds 28/02/2014 - @Labor Luzern Semir Jahic - [email protected]

description

Was heute auf dem Teller liegt, sieht noch so aus wie vor 50 Jahren, ist es aber nicht. Bei unserem Lucerne Minds 14/2 Treffen ging es um das Thema "Essen heute" bzw. um die Verbreitung von Gentech-modifizierten Lebensmittel, welche Firmen die grossen Treiber dahinter sind und ob es gentechnisch veränderte Lebensmittel braucht. Autor: Semir Jahic - [email protected]

Transcript of Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

Page 1: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

Essen Heute

LucerneMinds

28/02/2014 - @Labor Luzern

Semir Jahic - [email protected]

Page 2: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute
Page 3: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

ä

Page 4: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

ä

Page 5: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

ä

Page 6: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

ä

Page 7: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

ä

”by inserting a foreign gene derived from, say, bacteria into corn, you can give the plant a trait it wouldn’t otherwise possess.”

Page 8: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute
Page 10: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute
Page 11: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

• « »

• ä

GM maize share in the total maize acreage of a country

Page 12: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

http://drhyman.com/blog/2011/05/13/5-reasons-high-fructose-corn-syrup-will-kill-you/

ä

http://www.sustainabletable.org/704/high-fructose-corn-syrup-if-this-doesn-t-convince-you-nothing-wil

Page 13: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

« ä ö

»

Quelle: http://www.arte.tv/de/todbringender-genmais/6939396,CmC=6939762.html

Page 15: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

• The defenses of the potato plant have fought off the spores, rendering them harmless • “crops remain controversial in Europe, and only two are approved for planting in the

EU.” • How genetically modified crops could help protect the world’s food supply • defenses against plant diseases, which annually destroy some 15 percent of the

world’s agricultural harvest. • Climate change is likely to make the problem far worse • Creating a potato variety through conventional breeding, for example, takes at least

15 years; producing a genetically modified one takes less than six months. • But the lengthy testing and regulatory processes for genetically modified crops, and

the danger that consumers will reject them, mean that only “a handful of large companies” can afford the expense and risk of developing them, he says.

• But recent genomic breakthroughs are encouraging. Scientists have sequenced the genomes of crops such as rice, potatoes, bananas, and wheat. At the same time, advances in molecular biology mean that genes can be deleted, modified, and inserted with far greater precision. I

http://www.technologyreview.com/featuredstory/522596/why-we-will-need-genetically-modified-foods/

Page 16: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute
Page 17: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

• « »

Quelle: NZZ

Page 18: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

Page 19: Lucerne Minds 14/2 - Essen heute

Essen Heute