Genetically Modified Foods: Consumers' Attitudes and Labeling Issues

M. Veeman, W. Adamowicz
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Consumers' attitudes to genetically modified (GM) food ingredients and their reactions to and preferences for labeling of GM food are topical issues for Canadian food policy and are the subjects of this study. This project included several components. The first of these was an assessment of public attitudes to biotechnology and to GM food based on evidence from polls and other studies. These show increasing awareness and some increase in wariness of GM food, in Canada and elsewhere. In the second component of the project, analysis of survey data on Alberta consumers' preferences for different policy approaches to GM food was undertaken. This analysis indicates a preference by Alberta residents for GM food policy to emphasize the provision of more information to consumers, through labeling, over a policy that would provide for more rigorous inspection; even so, more inspection was favored by many respondents. More regulation that would restrict biotechnology was the least favoured of the three options that were presented to Alberta respondents. In a third component of the project, a case study on individual's attitudes to and preferences for GM ingredients in two selected food items (one of which was a nacho chip and the other of which was bread) was pursued through focus groups that were conducted in Edmonton, Alberta in 2002. This indicated highly varied attitudes and responses to GM food in general and to the selected products in particular. Attitudes to and preferences for environmental and health benefits that might be introduced through biotechnology were explored in these groups. Some 50 percent of focus group respondents indicated a willingness to buy the identified GM products, at a price discount. The fourth and final component of the project involved two sections of a Canada- wide survey, conducted in early 2003. These components queried respondents' assessments of the importance of various food safety risks and various environmental issues associated with food and agriculture, as well as attitudes to labelling policy. Overall, Canadians tended to see agricultural biotechnology as more of an environmental risk than a food risk and numbers of other food and environmental issues were seen to be more risky by many respondents. However the use of genetic modification/engineering in food production was seen as a very high risk issue by about one-fifth of respondents. Respondents also indicated a strong desire for public involvement in biotechnology policy, voted strongly for mandatory labeling and disagreed that labeling is not needed if the product's quality remains unchanged. An appreciable majority of respondents expressed a degree of skepticism concerning the use of voluntary labeling. The findings of this project have served as a basis for subsequent more extensive and detailed assessment of Canadian consumers' risk preferences and trade-offs in the context of specific product GM labelling policies.
转基因食品:消费者的态度和标签问题
消费者对转基因食品成分的态度以及他们对转基因食品标签的反应和偏好是加拿大食品政策的热点问题,也是本研究的主题。这个项目包括几个部分。第一份报告是根据民意调查和其他研究得出的证据,评估公众对生物技术和转基因食品的态度。这些表明,在加拿大和其他地方,人们对转基因食品的认识和警惕有所提高。在该项目的第二个组成部分中,对艾伯塔省消费者对不同转基因食品政策方法的偏好的调查数据进行了分析。这一分析表明,阿尔伯塔省居民倾向于转基因食品政策,强调通过标签向消费者提供更多信息,而不是提供更严格的检查政策;即便如此,许多受访者还是支持更多的检查。在提供给艾伯塔省受访者的三个选项中,限制生物技术的更多法规是最不受欢迎的。在该项目的第三个组成部分中,通过2002年在艾伯塔省埃德蒙顿进行的焦点小组进行了一项关于个人对两种选定食品(其中一种是玉米片,另一种是面包)中转基因成分的态度和偏好的案例研究。这表明人们对转基因食品,特别是对所选产品的态度和反应各不相同。这些小组探讨了对可能通过生物技术带来的环境和健康惠益的态度和偏好。大约50%的焦点小组受访者表示愿意以折扣价格购买已确定的转基因产品。该项目的第四个也是最后一个组成部分涉及2003年初进行的加拿大范围调查的两个部分。这些组成部分询问受访者对各种食品安全风险和与食品和农业相关的各种环境问题的重要性的评估,以及对标签政策的态度。总体而言,加拿大人倾向于将农业生物技术视为环境风险,而不是食品风险,许多受访者认为其他食品和环境问题的风险更大。然而,约五分之一的受访者认为,在粮食生产中使用基因改造/工程是一个非常高风险的问题。受访者还表示强烈希望公众参与生物技术政策,强烈支持强制性标签,并不同意如果产品质量保持不变就不需要标签。相当多的受访者对自愿标签的使用表示一定程度的怀疑。该项目的研究结果为随后更广泛和详细地评估加拿大消费者在特定产品转基因标签政策背景下的风险偏好和权衡提供了基础。
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