November 16, 2017
Petitions signed by more than 1 million people were delivered to the U.S. Department of Justice on Nov. 14 calling on the department to block the proposed merger of Bayer and Monsanto.
The petitions were collected by Action Aid, Avaaz, Center for Food Safety, Clif Bar Family Foundation/Seed Matters, CREDO, Food and Water Watch, Friends of the Earth, Organic Consumers Association, Organic Seed Alliance, Pesticide Action Network North America, Rural Advancement Foundation International, Sierra Club and SumOfUS.
The same day, two reports were released that are critical of the proposed merger.
Friends of the Earth, SumOfUs and the Open Markets Institute released analysis, “Bayer-Monsanto Merger: Big Data, Big Agriculture, Big Problems,” which explores the implications of a combined Big Data, chemical and seed platform owned by Bayer and Monsanto and how it may impact competition and farmer choice.
Consumer Federation of America also released a report, “Mega-Mergers in the U.S. Seed and Agrochemical Sector the Political Economy of Tight Oligopolies on Steroids and the Squeeze on Farmers and Consumers.” The report uses the concept of a “tight oligopoly on steroids” to examine how the unique characteristics of the Bayer-Monsanto merger magnify their market power in the seed/agrochemical sector and squeeze farmers and consumers.
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“The opportunity for every farmer, every business and every entrepreneur to have a fair shot at an open and just market is the core principal that built America and its people's prosperity,” said Joe Maxwell, executive director of Organization for Competitive Markets. “Our government's unwillingness to enforce our anti-monopoly laws and allow these mega-mergers to go forward is threatening our very democracy.”
“Bayer and Monsanto’s toxic mega-merger is a danger to our planet and everyone living on it,” said Erich Pica, president with Friends of the Earth. “Over 1 million Americans have called on the Department of Justice to protect our farmers and families from the consolidation of corporate power. Bayer and Monsanto’s merger is a direct threat to the future of people and our environment. The Justice Department must put on the breaks and stop this merger.”
“A merger between Bayer and Monsanto is a five-alarm threat to our food supply and to farmers around the world,” explained Angus Wong, Campaign Manager with SumOfUs. “This new mega corporation would be the world’s biggest seed maker and pesticide company, defying important antitrust protections, giving it unacceptable control over critical aspects of our food supply – undermining consumer choice and the freedom and stability of farmers worldwide.”
“Regulators should listen to the farmers, ranchers, researchers, and industry experts who have called on them to block the Bayer/Monsanto merger,” said Leah Douglas, reporter and analyst at the Open Markets Institute. “The merger threatens to bring higher prices, job losses, and continued consolidation to a sector that already suffers from too little competition.”
“This mega-merger will make it even harder to find open-pollinated, heirloom seeds that smaller, independent family farmers prefer,” said Ben Burkett, Mississippi vegetable farmer, board president of National Family Farm Coalition and representative at Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund.
“The ongoing horizontal and vertical integration of our already highly concentrated food production system is killing competition for America’s cattle ranchers. In fact, the U.S. cattle industry is now the only remaining livestock sector not already controlled from birth to plate by just a few multinational behemoths,” said Bill Bullard, chief executive officer, Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of America.
If the Bayer-Monsanto merger is approved, the new company would be the world’s largest vegetable seed company, world’s largest cottonseed company, world’s largest manufacturer and seller of herbicides, the world’s largest owner of intellectual property/patents for herbicide tolerant traits. Should the merger move forward, 77% of the corn seed in America would be controlled by two companies, Bayer-Monsanto and Dow-DuPont.
Source: Unbendable Media
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