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Why GMO-Free Cheerios are Nice, But Far From a Major Victory
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Why GMO-Free Cheerios are Nice, But Far From a Major Victory

Source: naturalsociety.com


When General Mills announced earlier this month that their original Cheerios would now be GMO-free, the media gobbled it up like it was some major victory against genetically-modified giants. But unfortunately, it isn’t. Though the move by the huge cereal company is a nice one, it’s little more than a conciliatory offering, and truly it’s likely the only one we’ll see from General Mills.

You see, the company is one of many who are dedicated to fighting GM-labeling laws because they know most of their products are loaded with GMOs. Cheerios simply represented the easiest and least-painful way to give conscientious shoppers a small victory they could capitalize on for years to come.

Here is the announcement on the General Mills Cheerios website:

“We don’t use genetically modified ingredients in original Cheerios. Our principal ingredient has always been whole grain oats – and there are no GMO oats. We use a small amount of corn starch in cooking, and just one gram of sugar per serving for taste. But our corn starch comes from non-GMO corn, and we use only non-GMO pure cane sugar.”

Basically, it was an easy move for the company to take genetically-modified ingredients out of Cheerios, because there were only 2 to begin with—corn starch and sugar beets. But to remove the genetically-modified ingredients from the rest of their cereal? Even General Mills says there’s no chance:

“Cheerios’ principal ingredient has always been whole grain oats, and there are no GMO oats. We use just a small amount of corn starch in cooking, and just one gram of sugar per serving for taste. So we were able to change how we source and handle ingredients to ensure that the corn starch for original Cheerios comes only from non-GMO corn, and our sugar is only non-GMO pure cane sugar. For our other cereals, the widespread use of GM seed in crops such as corn, soy, or beet sugar would make reliably moving to non-GM ingredients difficult, if not impossible.”

The company admits their other Cheerios varieties and thusly their other cereals are so loaded with genetically modified ingredients, it would be difficult nay impossible to remove them all.

But wait, aren’t General Mills cereals in Europe made without GMOs? Sure enough.

[...]

Read the full article at: naturalsociety.com

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