The Non-GMO Project—a non-profit founded in 2008—certifies that a company’s product has no genetically modified ingredients. It charges companies from several hundred to several thousand dollars, depending on the complexity of a product’s supply chain.
The group’s mission statement reads: “The Non-GMO Project is a non-profit organization committed to preserving and building sources of non-GMO products, educating consumers, and providing verified non-GMO choices.” But its oft-admitted goal since its incubation has been to remove GMOs from the marketplace, with the non-GMO label seen as a tool to make that happen.
Executive Director Megan Westgate told the Wall Street Journal that it is focusing on shrinking the market for existing GMO ingredients and prevent new commercial biotech crops, which would grow the business of the organic and natural products industry. That philosophy can be traced back to 1997, when Peter M. Ligotti, a Maharishi cult member and organic industry marketer pitched the potential marketing benefits of such a label to Whole Foods (email from WikiLeaks):
To label the non-GE food will create an incredible market niche in the U.S. and will create greater awareness of the issue world-wide. Marketing people would seize upon the idea as a way to create product differentiation while doing some good for the world…. Go for a total ban at the same time. When we do achieve a ban, we will need to know which products to leave on the shelves and which to throw away. Labeling the GE and NON-GE food will give us clarity when that day finally arrives.
The Non-GMO label landed its most high-profile partner in the conventional food industry when Cargill announced in March 2017 with a Tweet and a press release that it was partnering with the Non-GMO Project to verify three of its ingredients: erythritol, cane sugar and high oleic.
“Consumer demand for non-GMO food and beverages is growing, and Cargill is responding,” said Mike Wagner, Managing Director for Cargill Starches and Sweeteners North America. “We’re delighted to work with the Non-GMO Project, the leading verifier of non-GMO products in the United States. Their distinctive trademark is the most recognized symbol for non-GMO products in the country.”
The partnership touched off backlash in the science, journalism and farming communities, and thousands of Tweets lambasting, Cargill, which then rushed out a statement on Twitter distancing itself from its down agreement.
That post in turn created a backlash, as in effect Cargill acknowledged it was putting science aside and was adopting the label for purely marketing reasons, even if it confused consumers.
The requirements to attain non-GMO certification is even stricter than incorporated in the Vermont labeling law or instituted in Europe. That means many common products that use genetically engineered enzymes commonly used in the making of Vermont cheeses, popular beers and vitamin-fortified cereals cannot be certified under this label.
According to its website, as of April 2015, the Non-GMO Project had more than 29,500 verified products representing well over $11 billion in annual sales, sales of packaged produce with the group’s Non-GMO label in the 52 weeks ended June 14, 2015 grew 30 percent from a year earlier to $1.1 billion. Of the 33,000 newly launched products that market-research firm Mintel adds to its global database each month, 3.8% of food and beverage products included a GMO-free claim on the package last year, up from 1.6% in 2010. Many of them are certified by the Non-GMO Project.
The organization has come under criticism, particularly from scientists, for labeling foods based on the method of production (i.e. genetic engineering), rather than on the final food product. The May 2016 National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) report on GMOs recommended that GMOs—and other crops altered via new breeding techniques like CRISPR—should not be evaluated or labeled based on the genetic modification technique. The NASEM report states that the U.S. regulatory system needs to assess crop varieties based on their individual characteristics, not the way they are produced.
The Non-GMO Project will certify some products made with genetically modified ingredients, just not ones made with the most modern techniques. Plant Scientist Steve Savage noted that the Non-GMO Project label can be found on crops genetically altered via mutagenesis, like sweet grapefruits.
These delicious grapefruit varieties are a textbook example of how crops were genetically modified back in the 1960s and ’70s using a method called “mutagenesis breeding.” Basically, seeds (or in this case pieces of budwood) were exposed to gamma radiation in substantial doses, and then sifted through to find ones with mutations to their DNA that had desirable qualities.
The project also certifies items, in particular fruits and vegetables, for which there are no GMO alternatives, which may mislead customers who often pay more for an informationally meaningless label. The organization offers its certification label to companies that produce products that contain no DNA, such as salt, as well as foods not intended for human consumption, like cat litter.
Some products have had to be reformulated to conform to the Non-GMO Project’s standards, resulting in a loss of nutrients.
History
The Non-GMO Project is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization formally incorporated in 2007 and received IRS non-profit approval in 2008 (EIN 02-0799621). The organization began as an initiative of independent natural foods retailers in the U.S. and Canada,[2] with the stated aim to provide non-GMO labeling for products produced in compliance with their own Non-GMO Project Standard.[3] The initiative was inspired by and founding members who were affiliated with natural product lobbyist Craig Winters and his “Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods” (a.k.a. “The Coordinating Council”) which also created and housed Jeffrey M. Smith‘s Institute for Responsible Technology.
It is supported by John Fagan, a Raja of the Global Country of World Peace with Global Responsibility for Food Purity and Safety and for Healthy Invincibility associated with the Maharishi movement in Fairfield, IA., and his company Genetic-ID, along with various organic and natural product company sponsors. Their work is supported by donations and fees paid by companies promoting non-GMO certified products. The group appears closely affiliated with the Maharishi movement in Fairfield, IA.[1]
In a 2011 letter Smith described early meetings of the group he attended in 2006 organized by Winters and United Natural Foods CEO Michael Funk to lay the groundwork for launching the Non-GMO project. According to Smith, the early board members and organizers with Winters and Funk included: George Gerner (Natural Grocer Company), Patrick Conner (Big Carrot Natural Foods Market), Mark Squire (Good Earth), Arran Stephens (Nature’s Path), Michael Potter (Eden Foods), Grant Lundberg (Lundberg Family Farms), George Siemon (Organic Valley), John Fagan (Genetic-ID), Megan Westgate (Food Conspiracy Coop) and Margaret Wittenberg (Whole Foods Market).[4] [5]
According to Food Chemical News, two “natural” food retailers began to form the project, hoping to create a standardized definition of non-GMO.[6] The Project worked with FoodChain Global Advisors (a.k.a. Global ID Group – a consulting arm of the Genetic-ID Group created by John Fagan)[7] which provided the scientific and technical GMO testing expertise. In in the Spring of 2007, the project’s board of directors[8] was expanded to include representatives from additional groups, and formed advisory boards for technical and policy issues.[9]
Labeling and Non-GMO Verification Process
The Non-GMO Project contracts with founding member Global FoodChain Advisors to provide verification and testing services, the costs for which are born by companies submitting products for non-GMO certification.[12] The for-profit FoodChain, not the Non-GMO Project, invoices companies directly[13] and a separate fee is paid to the Non-GMO Project for the licensing agreement to use the non-GMO logo on product labels and other marketing materials. FoodChain does not require testing of submitted products if company submitted paperwork meets standard guidelines. If testing or facility inspection is required, then FoodChain sister-organization Genetic-ID conducts such testing. No disclosures of this business relationship to the Non-GMO Projects’ founding board members and ongoing business relationship to FoodChain are found on their IRS 990 tax forms.
Non-GMO project certification fees paid to the FoodChain advisors includes:[14]
- $695 (up from $595 in 2015) membership fee
- $110 (up from $105-$125) per product evaluation fee (of which $50 (up from $35) goes to the Non-GMO project)
- High GMO-Risk Ingredient Fee $50 per ingredient
- Facility Fee $295 per location
If needed
- Facility inspection $1,295 – $1,995 per day + travel expense
- Testing (varies) – see footnote linked pricing sheet for additional details
Dividing the pre 2016 $35 fee into the 2013 reported program revenue for the Non-GMO Project would be equal to evaluating 9,200 products (twice as many as the 20,000 product claimed on their IRS 990 tax return). Using the claimed 20,000 products verified, fees to FoodChain advisers would have been a baseline of $2.1 – 2.5 million, plus membership fees from more than 3,000 brands (brand $1.785M, plus other facility, testing and consulting fees. As such, Non-GMO project founders at the for-profit Global FoodChain advisers are collecting more than $4 million in fees annually – at a minimum, this is more than 10 times the verification services fees collected by their non-profit partner.
As of December 2017, total revenue from “verifying products” is estimated to exceed $100,000 annually, which is used in campaigns to frighten consumers about the safety of conventional foods. Heightened consumer fear drives more companies to pay for the Non-GMO Project label. This chart illustrates how ubiquitous the non-GMO Project has become, and how profitable it is to capitalize on people’s scientifically unwarranted concerns about the safety of GMO foods.
Product Reformulations
Nutritionists and scientists have noted that products reformulated to be able to earn the Non GMO label are sometimes less healthy than their GMO alternatives. In December of 2014, NPR Food and Agriculture correspondent Dan Charles took note that vitamins were stripped out of both Cheerios and Grape-Nuts were to accommodate the Non-GMO label:
When they actually arrived on supermarket shelves, though, there was a mysterious change in their list of ingredients. Four vitamins that previously had been added to Grape-Nuts — vitamins A, D, B-12 and B-2 (also known as riboflavin) — were gone. Riboflavin vanished from Cheerios.
Vitamins are essential as nutritional components and are indispensable for the maintenance of many metabolic processes. They are often inserted in foods to enhance nutritional content. An insufficient vitamin supply can lead to deficiency diseases. That’s created a large vitamin manufacturing market, including vitamins using genetic engineering.
There are various methods for production of vitamins: chemical synthesis, extraction from plants or herbal material–and biotechnological methods with the help of microorganisms. For example, some but not all companies are making vitamin B-12 and riboflavin using genetically modified microbes, and have published scientific papers showing how this can be done.
Many manufactured vitamins do not meet the Non-GMO standard. Additives that are produced in a closed system with the help of genetically modified microorganisms do not have to be declared, providing that the specific additive has been purified and contains no microorganisms. They are not labelled in any country in the world. But they do fall under the Non-GMO guidelines, prompting companies who have such products and desire the label to remove them.
Some vitamins are made naturally by bacteria and yeast, but manufacturers cannot always guarantee these microorganisms weren’t fed sugar from non-GMO sources. Furthermore, it is difficult to verify if the cornstarch vitamins are often mixed with for handling purposes is from non-GMO sources. Other ways to get non-GMO vitamins include getting them from other countries, like China, or creating them synthetically in a lab. However, these methods can be expensive and time consuming, and it is likely companies would rather drop the vitamins than deal with the added work.
These changes did not help consumers, noted Wayne Parrott, professor of crop science at the University of Georgia. “The new versions are certainly less nutritious. Here are the nutritional differences for both Cheerios and Grape-Nuts comparing the conventional versions with the Non-GMO versions:
Some products forced to reformulate to gain the Non-GMO label have not only lose vitamins, they’ve become less cost effective. The price of Grape Nuts increased 10% on a per volume basis. Other examples show seemingly identical products with drastic price differences due to the presence of the Non-GMO Project label on the more expensive version.
Key People
- Megan Westgate, executive director and board member
- Courtney Pineau, assistant director[10]
- Nichole Oleson Operations Manager & Executive Coordinator
- Joyce de Brevannes Marketing & Communications Director
- Annie Shannahan Client Services Director
- Patricia DeChristopher Standards & Verification Director
Board of Directors:
- Alisa Gravitz CEO, Green America
- Corinne Shindelar CEO, Independent Natural Food Retailers Association (INFRA)
- Mark Squire Owner, Good Earth Natural & Organic Foods
- Maureen Kirkpatrick
- Megan Westgate Executive Director, Non-GMO Project
- George Naylor
- Michael Potter CEO, Eden Foods
- Trudy Bialic Director of Public Affairs, PCC Natural Markets
Standard Committee:
The Standard Committee exists to oversee development of the Non-GMO Project Standard.
-
Beth Unger, Organic Valley (Voting)
-
David Gould, IFOAM (Voting)
-
Tara Froemming, SK Food (Voting)
-
Daniel Hall, Guide Environmental (Voting)
-
Andrew Huth, Jimbo’s…Naturally! (Voting)
-
Brandon Nauman, SCS Global Services (Non-voting)
-
Kristina Bierschwale, Where Food Comes From (Non-voting)
-
Jennifer Schomp, FoodChain ID (Non-voting)
Funding Sources
- See subscriber/ certified members list
- Non-GMO Project listed as 501c3 non-profit and according to IRS form 990 tax returns reported income as follows:[21]
- 2013 Donations and grants: $575,698; Program revenue: $322,157
- 2012 Donations and grants: $250,832; Program revenue $156,273
- 2011 Donations and grants: $131,295; Program revenue: $324,405
- 2010 Donations and grants: $165,001; Program revenue: $52,143
- 2009 Donations and grants: $128,837; Program revenue: $18,006
- 2008 Donations and grants: $80,563 (no reported program revenue)
- 2007 Donations and grants: $78,0000 (no reported program revenue)
AFFILIATIONS
FoodChain Advisors (Global ID Group)
- Domain Name: FOODCHAINADVISORS.COM
- Registrar URL: http://www.godaddy.com
- Updated Date: 2012-05-10 16:27:32
- Creation Date: 2006-12-09 06:53:52
- Registrar Expiration Date: 2017-05-22 22:59:59
- Registrar: GoDaddy.com, LLC
- Registrant Name: Doug MacGregor
- Registrant Organization: Global ID Group
- Registrant Street: PO Box 1810
- Registrant City: Fairfield
- Registrant State/Province: Iowa
- Registrant Postal Code: 52556
- Ph: (641) 469-6181
See Also
Resources
References
- 1 https://www.facebook.com/EcoFairfield/posts/521770007879198
- 2 [http://www.nongmoproject.org/about/governance/board-of-directors/ Board of Directors | The Non-GMO Project
- 3 http://www.nongmoproject.org/product-verification/non-gmo-project-standard/
- 4 http://www.responsibletechnology.org/posts/in-praise-of-the-non-gmo-project/
- 5 http://www.naturesfoodpatch.com/common/news/store_news.asp?task=store_news&sid_store_news=91&storeID=a5pjlp3me3s92n5800akhlbd34ws3rl1
- 6 “Natural” food retailers to set non-biotech standard” Food Chemical News http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-12665171_ITM“>
“Natural” food retailers to set non-biotech standard” Food Chemical News http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-12665171_ITM - 7 http://www.fmi.org/forms/CompanyFormPublic/search?action=find&Company_id=4C5430000104B
- 8 http://www.nongmoproject.org/about/governance/board-of-directors
- 9 http://www.nongmoproject.org/about/history/ The Non-GMO Project History
- 10 www.linkedin.com/pub/courtney-pineau/5/99/414
- 12 http://www.foodchainid.com/non-gmo-project-verification/
- 13 http://www.foodchainid.com/non-gmo-project-verification/verification-process/
- 14 http://www.foodchainid.com/non-gmo-project-verification/pricing/
- 15 http://www.nongmoproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/07/non-gmo-seeks-industry.pdf
- 16 http://newhope360.com/supplements/register-non-gmo-future-today
- 17 http://www.theorganicpages.com/topo/companylisting.html?search=companySearch&CompanyId=28525&search_submitted=%CE%B1=&txtCompany=
- 18 http://www.cert-id.com/documents/pr2.aspx
- 19 Kepler is married to Tom Kepler, a teacher of TM at the Maharishi Institute
- 20 https://www.facebook.com/EcoFairfield/posts/521770007879198
- 21 http://www.guidestar.org/organizations/02-0799621/non-gmo-project.aspx