A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Genetically Modified Sugarcane : A Case for Alternate Products
Current community attitudes towards genetically modified (GM)plants are quite negative, with the sugar industry having apparently accepted the view that sugar from genetically modified cane is regarded so badly by consumers at the present time that it could not be marketed successfully. In other industries, genetically modified cultivars that are environmentally friendly and not designed for human consumption (e.g., Bt cotton) have been accepted reasonably well. One of the main causes of public concern about genetic engineering has been the lack of information about the process and the types of products, particularly nonfood products, that can be developed. This paper describes exploratory research in the sugar industry in Queensland that attempted to determine the effect of providing information on gene technology on the attitudes of cane growers, their partners, and community members and the types of genetic modification that was most acceptable to them. Attitudes to genetic engineering of sugarcane, in general, were judged to become more positive, and the real concerns over introduction of the technology were revealed. Those applications that were most acceptable were also identified. ; This project was funded by the CRC (Cooperative Research Center) for Sugar Industry Innovation through Biotechnology. ; Includes bibliographical references
Genetically Modified Sugarcane : A Case for Alternate Products
Current community attitudes towards genetically modified (GM)plants are quite negative, with the sugar industry having apparently accepted the view that sugar from genetically modified cane is regarded so badly by consumers at the present time that it could not be marketed successfully. In other industries, genetically modified cultivars that are environmentally friendly and not designed for human consumption (e.g., Bt cotton) have been accepted reasonably well. One of the main causes of public concern about genetic engineering has been the lack of information about the process and the types of products, particularly nonfood products, that can be developed. This paper describes exploratory research in the sugar industry in Queensland that attempted to determine the effect of providing information on gene technology on the attitudes of cane growers, their partners, and community members and the types of genetic modification that was most acceptable to them. Attitudes to genetic engineering of sugarcane, in general, were judged to become more positive, and the real concerns over introduction of the technology were revealed. Those applications that were most acceptable were also identified. ; This project was funded by the CRC (Cooperative Research Center) for Sugar Industry Innovation through Biotechnology. ; Includes bibliographical references
Genetically Modified Sugarcane : A Case for Alternate Products
Grice, Janet (author) / Wegener, M. K. (author) / Romanach, L. M. (author) / Paton, S. (author) / Bonaventura, P. (author) / Garrad, S. (author)
2003-01-01
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
690
Alternate/Modified Binders for Airfield Pavements
NTIS | 1988
|Construction Products with Sugarcane Bagasse Ash Binder
ASCE | 2017
|