- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
- Animals
- Arts and Culture
- Biological Diversity
- Children and Young People
- Climate Change and Energy
- Community Participation in Government
- Constitutional Reform and Democracy
- Corporate Governance
- Disability
- Drugs, Substance Abuse and Addiction
- Early Childhood Education and Care
- Economics
- Education
- Employment and Workplace Relations
- Environmental Principles
- Genetically Manipulated Organisms
- Global Economics
- Global Governance
- Health
- Housing
- Human Rights
- Immigration and Refugees
- International Relations
- Justice
- Marine and Coastal Areas
- Media and Communications
- Multiculturalism
- Natural Resources: Forests, Mining and Fisheries
- Nuclear and Uranium
- Older People
- Overseas Aid
- Peace and Security
- Population
- Science and Technology
- Sex, Sexuality and Gender Identity
- Social Services
- Sport and Physical Recreation
- Sustainable Agriculture
- Sustainable Planning and Transport
- Waste
- Water and Inland Aquatic Environments
- Women
Principles
The Australian Greens believe that:
- Genetically manipulated[1] organisms (GMOs), their products, and the chemicals used to manage them pose significant risks to natural and agricultural ecosystems and human health.
- The precautionary principle must be applied to the use of GMOs and the techniques for producing them.
- Scientific evidence must be the basis for assessing and licensing GMOs. GMO assessments must be broad, independent and scientifically robust.
- Living organisms such as plants, animals and micro-organisms are not inventions. Patents on life are unethical and against the public interest.
- The Australian government must prohibit the use of ‘terminator’ technologies (Gene Use Restriction) that prevent seeds from germinating when planted.
- Farmers and consumers have a right to grow and consume non-GMO foods.
- Everyone has a right to know if foods contain any ingredients made using GM techniques, through the comprehensive labelling of those products.
Aims
The Australian Greens want:
- A moratorium on the release of GMOs into the environment until there is an adequate scientific understanding of their long term impact on the environment, human and animal health. This includes the removal as far as possible of all GMOs from the Australian environment and food supply while the moratorium is in place.
- Mandatory clear and obvious labelling of all foods containing any ingredient, additive, processing aid or other constituent produced using GMOs.
- A ban on patenting all living organisms, including plants, animals and micro-organisms, and naturally occurring DNA code sequence information.
- A rigorous peer reviewed approach to assessing and licensing GMOs which sets objective benchmarks, standards and quality assurance systems in advance of the use and release of GMOs.
- A strengthened, transparent, precautionary regulatory and monitoring system which prevents GMO contamination.
- Assessment and research processes that ensure GMOs are safe for the environment, and that derived foods are safe for consumption.
- Fulfilment by Australia of its responsibilities under the Convention on Biological Diversity. This includes signing and ratifying the Cartagena Biosafety Protocol on the safe international transfer, handling and use of living modified organisms.
- Certification of all imported seed, food and other products as GM or GM-free through stringent independent testing.
- Balanced, accurate, complete and high quality information to be made available to the public, on the environmental, economic and social aspects of the genetic manipulation of living organisms.
- Publicly-funded agricultural research and development to prioritise sustainable production methods not genetic manipulation.
- Legal liability for adverse effects arising from planting, harvesting, distribution, sale of GMOs to lie with growers using GMO and licence holders.
Authorised and printed by Ben Spies-Butcher and Christine Cunningham, 8-10 Hobart Place Canberra 2601
[1] The artificial transfer of genes from one species to another with which it does not normally cross fertilize.

