- Iowa Gov extends temp. weight limit exemption
- Insecticides and non-target insects
- USDA's farm prices index down nearly 8% in November
- Decommissioning Old Wells Protects Water Quality
- Farm Payment Question Lingers
- Lame Duck Session Continues
- Soil tests help plan for next season
- Now's the time to order trees
- Dairy producers struggling
- Farm Credit elections upcoming
- Publisher among speakers at NC convention
- NE Pork 2nd annual Environmental Stewards award
- Nebraska Corn Board Checkoff Update
- GAO Report Critical of Certain Program Payments
- Key South Korean Retailers to Stock Beef
- Procedure Challenged in VeraSun Bankruptcy
- ERS Estimates Farm Income
- Interim director made permanent at Neb. sanctuary
- China lifts food price controls
- Colo., Kan. in top court in water dispute
- ND farmer defies government by draining wetlands
- Turning Long-time ‘Bane’ Into a Crop
- Comment Period on Greenhouse Gases Ends
- Agencies Set Energy Corridors
- Seedstock sire selection and cow herd management clinics
- Postville plant could reopen soon
- West Point Implement of Columbus new Massey Ferguson dealer
- Aurora Coop financial results
- Nebraska Energy Plan coming together
- Neb. farmers encouraged to sample soil
- Food deserts studied
- Moran asks Obama for Cuba trade reform
- Churches urge help in plant closing
Smithfield Foods is one of 20 companies pledging not to use milk or meat from cloned livestock. The pledge is a response to a survey conduced by the consumer group Center for Food Safety. Polls are showing most consumers are not comfortable with the idea of eating products from cloned livestock. A spokesperson for Kraft says the food company has informed suppliers it will only accept ingredients from conventional animals - citing surveys that indicate consumers aren’t receptive to ingredients from cloned animals.
Wal-Mart and Tyson are also banning the use of cloned animals in food products. But the pledge does not apply to products from the offspring of clones. The Center for Food Safety says 8 companies have said they won’t knowingly use food from clones’ offspring.
The Center’s survey comes after the Food and Drug Administration denied its petition asking for mandatory labeling of clones and their offspring - as well as the regulation of animal cloning as a new animal drug. That was in January - shortly after FDA ruled products from cloned cattle, swine, goats and their offspring are safe.
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