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Cargill Inc. donated $10 million more than a decade ago for naming rights on a plant genomics building at the University of Minnesota, while two sensory labs at Purdue carry the imprimaturs of the Kroger Co. and ConAgra Foods Inc. While the Food and Water Watch report suggests spending millions of dollars on building naming rights may also buy access to key decision-makers, the donors and university officials say that's not true. "In our experience, there is no correlation between naming rights and university research," Monsanto spokeswoman Sara Miller said. Another Monsanto spokeswoman, Kelli Powers, said the company "is proud of its contributions to land-grant universities and support of university agricultural research," whether through naming rights or student scholarships. Michael Doyle, a professor of food microbiology at Georgia and director of its Center for Food Safety, rejected the notion that companies such as Cargill, ConAgra and the Coca-Cola Co. unduly influence the center's research agenda when they buy seats on the Board of Advisors. "Industry does not tell me how to spend that money," he said, noting that corporate support accounts for just 10 percent of the program's research budget. "But I ask the industry, `What are the areas you are interested in?'" Those interests range from pathogen control to insider access to scientists and regulators from the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control. Corporate partners are promised "special consideration" by Center for Food Safety faculty members, and the center's website reassures industry members that a prying press isn't allowed to attend those discussions. "What we're trying to do is come up with practical ways the industry can make our food safer," Doyle added. "It's not specific to a company ... Sometimes the research doesn't work out the way the industry wants. We don't hold back." With the current five-year farm bill set to expire at the end of September, Food and Water Watch wants Congress to boost the federal investment in campus agricultural research, with more resources steered toward sustainable methods, organic farming and reduced use of pesticides. The group also is calling for land-grant universities to more fully disclose gifts by private donors and wants agricultural research journals to adopt more stringent conflict-of-interest rules, similar to the recent crackdown by medical journals. "This is a conversation that needs to be had about how we support this research," Lovara said. "There are a lot of consequences of land grant-funding of industry research that haven't been examined." ___ Online: Food and Water Watch report:
http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/
reports/public-research-private-gain/
[Associated
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