19922002: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates"[8]
200104: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants"[9]
200104: One of four partners[10] of the EU project GMO RES COM[11]
since 2003 active in the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future.[12]
Since 2006 expert to the Steering Council of the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future,[13] member of the Genval Group, which drafted the vision paper,[14] and in 2004 cochair of the Plants for the Future working group Horizontal Issues.[15] The Genval Group was set up by the European Association for Bioindustries (EuropaBio) and the European Plant Science Organisation (EPSO), in cooperation with the Commission in 2003 to draft the ETP Plants for the Future 20year vision document.
200407: member of the Project Executive Committee of the EU project SIGMEA[16] (See more details at Detlef Bartsch).
since 2005: coordinator and/or partner of/in several GMO biosafety research projects funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); author of several papers published on GMO biosafety topics.
20052007: member of the advisory board of GMO compass,[17] then an EU project[18]
200509: member of the Management Board[19] and of the Executive Committee[20] of the EU project COEXTRA; chair of Working Package 1,
"Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation"[21]
200609: coordinator of the EU project BIOSAFENET in cooperation with ISBR.[22] The results of the project are used for the website http://www.gmosafety.eu ,[23] a German project for risk communication organized by the company Genius. At the closing conference of BIOSAFENET in June 2009 in Berlin, ISBR and PRRI also presented their activities.[24]
200609: Partner and working package leader in the EUPRRI project Science4BioReg[25]
2004: the German Federal ministry for consumer protection, food and agriculture (BMVEL) stopped financing the project "Production of marker
genefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox)",[26] in which markerfree GM crops were developed, in order to avoid conflicts of interest.
However, the research was continued 200508 with GM oilseed rape by Inge Broer from the University of Rostock.[27]
Participation in lobby organisations
Since 2004, president of the ISBR , member of several of its standing committees and member of the editorial board of its journal [http://www.isbr.info/journal/ Environmental Biosafety Research . (Other committee members of ISBR include Jeremy Sweet and Kristina Sinemus. Klaus Ammann is one of the editors in chief of EBR.)
since 2005: member of the Society of Plant Biotechnology, the German branch of the International Association of Plant Tissue culture &
Biotechnology (IAPTC & B)
since 2005: member of PRRI . He participated at the MOP4 meeting of the Biosafety Protocol (Bonn, 2008) as PRRI member, to present mainly project results from BIOSAFENET.
1. ↑ Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , BBA website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
2. ↑ Julius Kühn Institute – Federal Research Institute for Cultivated Plants , Key to Nature website, accessed 18 August 2009 3. ↑ Institute for Biosafety of Genetically Modified Plants , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
4. ↑ Fragebogen für Landwirte zum GVOMonitoring/Farmers Questionnaire for the Monitoring of GMO (Ergänzung zu den Artikeln im Nachrichtenblatt des Deutschen Pflanzenschutzdienstes 56 (8) & 56 (9) 2004) , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009 5. ↑ Bekanntmachung eines Bescheides zur Beschränkung des Inverkehrbringens gentechnisch veränderter Organismen nach dem
Gentechnikgesetz (BVL 47/2007/4) , 3/5/2007, BVL website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
6. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , GMO Safety website, accessed 18 August 2009
7. ↑ Dr. Joachim SCHIEMANN, Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , Technology Foresight Summit 2003, Budapest, accessed 18 August 2009
8. ↑ Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates , August 15 2002, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
9. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , June 10 2005, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
10. ↑ Partners , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 11. ↑ GMO RES COM , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
12. ↑ European Technology Platform Plants for the Future , European Technology Platform Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
13. ↑ Steering Council of the ‘Plants for the Future’ ETP , Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
14. ↑ Plants for the Future 2025: a European vision for plant genomics and biotechnology , DG for Research, Food Quality and Safety, 2004, p.
25
15. ↑ Working Group – Horizontal Issues , EPSO website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 16. ↑ SIGMEA , INRA website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
17. ↑ home page , GM Compass website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
18. ↑ GMO Compass , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009 19. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
20. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
21. ↑ Workpackage 1: Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 22. ↑ BIOSAFENET , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
23. ↑ GMO Safety website , accessed 22 Aug 2009
24. ↑ BIOSAFENET conference , GMO Compass website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 25. ↑ Science 4 BioReg , PRRI website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
26. ↑ Production of markergenefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox) , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 27. ↑ Obtaining markergenefree oilseed rape plants using the Cre/lox system , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
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[1] [2] Through a restructuring of German research institutes, the BBA became part of the Julius KühnInstitut (JKI). Here Schiemann is head of the Institute for Biosafety of Genetically Modified Plants. This includes research for and advice to the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer GM organisms within the Julius KühnInstitute and within BMELV’s research area.[3]
Since 1998, he has been coordinator of the BBA (now JKI) working group “Monitoring accompanying the cultivation of genetically modified plants in the agroecosystem” in which, among other issues, scientists, representatives of the different federal agencies and of biotech companies developed a questionnaire for farmers as a way of conducting postmarket monitoring.[4]
A similar questionnaire was used by Monsanto for the postmarket monitoring of GM maize MON810 cultivation and was considered to be insufficient by the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL) when it stopped the sale of MON810 seed in April 2007.[5] As coordinator he published several papers published on GMO monitoring, including farm questionnaires.
In 200104 he was the project leader on a related project, "Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants: Issues not confined to a single Land or crop".[6] On this topic he often works with Kerstin Schmidt (BioMath, BioOK and FINAB; Rostock, Germany), for example, on the publication of articles.
199699: OECD expert group on Harmonisation of Regulatory Oversight in Biotechnology.[7]
19922002: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates"[8]
200104: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants"[9]
200104: One of four partners[10] of the EU project GMO RES COM[11]
since 2003 active in the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future.[12]
Since 2006 expert to the Steering Council of the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future,[13] member of the Genval Group, which drafted the vision paper,[14] and in 2004 cochair of the Plants for the Future working group Horizontal Issues.[15] The Genval Group was set up by the European Association for Bioindustries (EuropaBio) and the European Plant Science Organisation (EPSO), in cooperation with the Commission in 2003 to draft the ETP Plants for the Future 20year vision document.
200407: member of the Project Executive Committee of the EU project SIGMEA[16] (See more details at Detlef Bartsch).
since 2005: coordinator and/or partner of/in several GMO biosafety research projects funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); author of several papers published on GMO biosafety topics.
20052007: member of the advisory board of GMO compass,[17] then an EU project[18]
200509: member of the Management Board[19] and of the Executive Committee[20] of the EU project COEXTRA; chair of Working Package 1,
"Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation"[21]
200609: coordinator of the EU project BIOSAFENET in cooperation with ISBR.[22] The results of the project are used for the website http://www.gmosafety.eu ,[23] a German project for risk communication organized by the company Genius. At the closing conference of BIOSAFENET in June 2009 in Berlin, ISBR and PRRI also presented their activities.[24]
200609: Partner and working package leader in the EUPRRI project Science4BioReg[25]
2004: the German Federal ministry for consumer protection, food and agriculture (BMVEL) stopped financing the project "Production of marker
genefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox)",[26] in which markerfree GM crops were developed, in order to avoid conflicts of interest.
However, the research was continued 200508 with GM oilseed rape by Inge Broer from the University of Rostock.[27]
Participation in lobby organisations
Since 2004, president of the ISBR , member of several of its standing committees and member of the editorial board of its journal [http://www.isbr.info/journal/ Environmental Biosafety Research . (Other committee members of ISBR include Jeremy Sweet and Kristina Sinemus. Klaus Ammann is one of the editors in chief of EBR.)
since 2005: member of the Society of Plant Biotechnology, the German branch of the International Association of Plant Tissue culture &
Biotechnology (IAPTC & B)
since 2005: member of PRRI . He participated at the MOP4 meeting of the Biosafety Protocol (Bonn, 2008) as PRRI member, to present mainly project results from BIOSAFENET.
1. ↑ Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , BBA website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
2. ↑ Julius Kühn Institute – Federal Research Institute for Cultivated Plants , Key to Nature website, accessed 18 August 2009 3. ↑ Institute for Biosafety of Genetically Modified Plants , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
4. ↑ Fragebogen für Landwirte zum GVOMonitoring/Farmers Questionnaire for the Monitoring of GMO (Ergänzung zu den Artikeln im Nachrichtenblatt des Deutschen Pflanzenschutzdienstes 56 (8) & 56 (9) 2004) , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009 5. ↑ Bekanntmachung eines Bescheides zur Beschränkung des Inverkehrbringens gentechnisch veränderter Organismen nach dem
Gentechnikgesetz (BVL 47/2007/4) , 3/5/2007, BVL website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
6. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , GMO Safety website, accessed 18 August 2009
7. ↑ Dr. Joachim SCHIEMANN, Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , Technology Foresight Summit 2003, Budapest, accessed 18 August 2009
8. ↑ Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates , August 15 2002, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
9. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , June 10 2005, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
10. ↑ Partners , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 11. ↑ GMO RES COM , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
12. ↑ European Technology Platform Plants for the Future , European Technology Platform Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
13. ↑ Steering Council of the ‘Plants for the Future’ ETP , Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
14. ↑ Plants for the Future 2025: a European vision for plant genomics and biotechnology , DG for Research, Food Quality and Safety, 2004, p.
25
15. ↑ Working Group – Horizontal Issues , EPSO website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 16. ↑ SIGMEA , INRA website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
17. ↑ home page , GM Compass website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
18. ↑ GMO Compass , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009 19. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
20. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
21. ↑ Workpackage 1: Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 22. ↑ BIOSAFENET , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
23. ↑ GMO Safety website , accessed 22 Aug 2009
24. ↑ BIOSAFENET conference , GMO Compass website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 25. ↑ Science 4 BioReg , PRRI website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
26. ↑ Production of markergenefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox) , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 27. ↑ Obtaining markergenefree oilseed rape plants using the Cre/lox system , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
Contents discussion view source history
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This page was last modified on 22 August 2009, at 14:40. This page has been accessed 134 times.
Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.2. Privacy policy About SpinProfiles Disclaimers
[1] [2] Through a restructuring of German research institutes, the BBA became part of the Julius KühnInstitut (JKI). Here Schiemann is head of the Institute for Biosafety of Genetically Modified Plants. This includes research for and advice to the Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer GM organisms within the Julius KühnInstitute and within BMELV’s research area.[3]
Since 1998, he has been coordinator of the BBA (now JKI) working group “Monitoring accompanying the cultivation of genetically modified plants in the agroecosystem” in which, among other issues, scientists, representatives of the different federal agencies and of biotech companies developed a questionnaire for farmers as a way of conducting postmarket monitoring.[4]
A similar questionnaire was used by Monsanto for the postmarket monitoring of GM maize MON810 cultivation and was considered to be insufficient by the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL) when it stopped the sale of MON810 seed in April 2007.[5] As coordinator he published several papers published on GMO monitoring, including farm questionnaires.
In 200104 he was the project leader on a related project, "Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants: Issues not confined to a single Land or crop".[6] On this topic he often works with Kerstin Schmidt (BioMath, BioOK and FINAB; Rostock, Germany), for example, on the publication of articles.
199699: OECD expert group on Harmonisation of Regulatory Oversight in Biotechnology.[7]
19922002: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates"[8]
200104: coordinator of the BMBF financed research project "Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants"[9]
200104: One of four partners[10] of the EU project GMO RES COM[11]
since 2003 active in the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future.[12]
Since 2006 expert to the Steering Council of the European Technology Platform Plants for the Future,[13] member of the Genval Group, which drafted the vision paper,[14] and in 2004 cochair of the Plants for the Future working group Horizontal Issues.[15] The Genval Group was set up by the European Association for Bioindustries (EuropaBio) and the European Plant Science Organisation (EPSO), in cooperation with the Commission in 2003 to draft the ETP Plants for the Future 20year vision document.
200407: member of the Project Executive Committee of the EU project SIGMEA[16] (See more details at Detlef Bartsch).
since 2005: coordinator and/or partner of/in several GMO biosafety research projects funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); author of several papers published on GMO biosafety topics.
20052007: member of the advisory board of GMO compass,[17] then an EU project[18]
200509: member of the Management Board[19] and of the Executive Committee[20] of the EU project COEXTRA; chair of Working Package 1,
"Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation"[21]
200609: coordinator of the EU project BIOSAFENET in cooperation with ISBR.[22] The results of the project are used for the website http://www.gmosafety.eu ,[23] a German project for risk communication organized by the company Genius. At the closing conference of BIOSAFENET in June 2009 in Berlin, ISBR and PRRI also presented their activities.[24]
200609: Partner and working package leader in the EUPRRI project Science4BioReg[25]
2004: the German Federal ministry for consumer protection, food and agriculture (BMVEL) stopped financing the project "Production of marker
genefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox)",[26] in which markerfree GM crops were developed, in order to avoid conflicts of interest.
However, the research was continued 200508 with GM oilseed rape by Inge Broer from the University of Rostock.[27]
Participation in lobby organisations
Since 2004, president of the ISBR , member of several of its standing committees and member of the editorial board of its journal [http://www.isbr.info/journal/ Environmental Biosafety Research . (Other committee members of ISBR include Jeremy Sweet and Kristina Sinemus. Klaus Ammann is one of the editors in chief of EBR.)
since 2005: member of the Society of Plant Biotechnology, the German branch of the International Association of Plant Tissue culture &
Biotechnology (IAPTC & B)
since 2005: member of PRRI . He participated at the MOP4 meeting of the Biosafety Protocol (Bonn, 2008) as PRRI member, to present mainly project results from BIOSAFENET.
1. ↑ Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , BBA website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
2. ↑ , Key to Nature website, accessed 18 August 2009
3. ↑ Institute for Biosafety of Genetically Modified Plants , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
4. ↑ Fragebogen für Landwirte zum GVOMonitoring/Farmers Questionnaire for the Monitoring of GMO (Ergänzung zu den Artikeln im Nachrichtenblatt des Deutschen Pflanzenschutzdienstes 56 (8) & 56 (9) 2004) , Julius KühnInstitut website, accessed 18 Aug 2009 5. ↑ Bekanntmachung eines Bescheides zur Beschränkung des Inverkehrbringens gentechnisch veränderter Organismen nach dem
Gentechnikgesetz (BVL 47/2007/4) , 3/5/2007, BVL website, accessed 18 Aug 2009
6. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , GMO Safety website, accessed 18 August 2009
7. ↑ Dr. Joachim SCHIEMANN, Institute for Plant Virology, Microbiology and Biosafety , Technology Foresight Summit 2003, Budapest, accessed 18 August 2009
8. ↑ Outcrossing from transgenic maize and quantifying outcrossing rates , August 15 2002, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
9. ↑ Concept and methods for postmarket monitoring of genetically modified plants. Issues not confined to a single Land or crop , June 10 2005, GMO Safety website of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, accessed 19 Aug 2009
10. ↑ Partners , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 11. ↑ GMO RES COM , GMO RES COM website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
12. ↑ European Technology Platform Plants for the Future , European Technology Platform Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
13. ↑ Steering Council of the ‘Plants for the Future’ ETP , Plants for the Future website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
14. ↑ Plants for the Future 2025: a European vision for plant genomics and biotechnology , DG for Research, Food Quality and Safety, 2004, p.
25
15. ↑ Working Group – Horizontal Issues , EPSO website, accessed 19 Aug 2009 16. ↑ SIGMEA , INRA website, accessed 19 Aug 2009
17. ↑ home page , GM Compass website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
18. ↑ GMO Compass , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009 19. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
20. ↑ Project Management , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
21. ↑ Workpackage 1: Biological Approaches For Gene Flow Mitigation , Coextra website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 22. ↑ BIOSAFENET , European Commission Research Biosociety website, accessed 21 Aug 2009
23. ↑ GMO Safety website , accessed 22 Aug 2009
24. ↑ BIOSAFENET conference , GMO Compass website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 25. ↑ Science 4 BioReg , PRRI website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
26. ↑ Production of markergenefree plants using a recombination system (Cre/lox) , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009 27. ↑ Obtaining markergenefree oilseed rape plants using the Cre/lox system , GMO Safety website, accessed 22 Aug 2009
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GENiales Getreide
TU Start LogIn Suchoptionen Suchen
Aktuelles und Termine Zukunftsfragen kontrovers
Termine
Veranstaltungsarchiv Reform der Hochschulen Disziplin
Klima, die Zweite Zukunftsfähiger Verkehr Christentum Islam Kunst ent sorgen?
Gutes Kino?
Autonomiebewegung Medienwissenschaft Atommüll
Kommunikation verbindet?
GENiales Getreide
Freier Wille Herzloser Tod AlltagsGen Bürgerrechte Marx oder Darwin?
Atomenergie Unis + Geld Globalisierung Windkraftr äder Geistes / Biowiss.
Wettbewerbsstaat USGeopolitik Apocalypse no(w)?
Ingenieurausbildung Mobilfunk
Montag, 10. Juli 2006, 18.30 Uhr Hörsaal SN 19.2, Eingang Pockelsstraße 4
GENiales Getreide? Versprechungen, Risiken und Nebenwirkungen der »Grünen Gentechnik«
Benedikt Härlin, Zukunftsstiftung Landwirtschaft Berlin sowie Initiative »Save our Seeds «, und Dr. Joachim Schiemann, Biologische Bundesanstalt f ür Land und Forstwirtschaft (BBA), Braunschweig
Moderation: Prof. Dr. Norbert F. Käufer, TU Braunschweig
Die Versprechungen der Grünen Gentechnik sind gro ß und vielfältig. Es wird behauptet, dass gentechnisch ver änderte Kulturpflanzen erh öhte Produktivit ät zeigen, den Pestizideinsatz verringern und einfacher zu handhaben sind. Durch gentechnische Manipulation wird versucht, Kulturpflanzen dazu zu bringen, höhere Gehalte lebenswichtiger N ährstoffe zu produzieren. Häufig wird von Befürwortern der Gr ünen Gentechnik der Eindruck erweckt, diese k önne einen entscheidenden Beitrag leisten, den Hunger in allen Teilen der Welt zu beseitigen. Andere Zweige der gentechnologischen Forschung zielen auf medizinische
Verwendung, etwa darauf, mit Kulturpflanzen Impfstoffe herzustellen. K önnen diese Versprechungen eingehalten werden?
Oder birgt die Grüne Gentechnik unabw ägbare Gefahren f ür Umwelt, menschliche und tierische Gesundheit? Werden wichtige Lebensgrundlagen im Rausch technologischer
Machbarkeitsphantasien dem Profitstreben der Konzerne geopfert?
Benedikt Härlin ist Koordinator der Europ äischen Initiative »Save our Seeds « sowie Mitglied des internationalen B üros der Weltbank und UNO zur Bewertung von Wissenschaft und Forschung für nachhaltige Entwicklung (IAASTD).Von 1996 bis
Benedikt Härlin ist Koordinator der Europ äischen Initiative »Save our Seeds « sowie Mitglied des internationalen B üros der Weltbank und UNO zur Bewertung von Wissenschaft und Forschung für nachhaltige Entwicklung (IAASTD).Von 1996 bis