MEDIA
ADVISORY
Friends of the Earth International
November 23, 2004
US TO LEGALIZE BIOTECH CONTAMINATION
US sets out plan to allow
contamination of the world's food supply
with experimental GM crops
WWW, 2005 (archived) WASHINGTON, DC (US) /
BRUSSELS (BELGIUM), November 23, 2004 A
new proposal to allow contamination of human
food crops with biotech or genetically
modified (GM) experimental crops grown on
"test" sites will be published
tomorrow (Wednesday) by the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) [1].
In sixty days from
Nov. 25 the new proposal could be accepted,
giving biotech companies a major
disincentive to control field tests
contamination which is therefore likely
to increase.
It is already impossible to test for the
presence of experimental GM food crops in
foods imported from or processed in the US,
because over two-thirds of US experimental
GM crops contain genes classified as
confidential which therefore can't be
detected.
Juan Lopez from Friends of the Earth
International said: "The Bush
Administration, with the active support of
the biotechnology industry, is about to
force their untested genetically modified
experiments into the world's food supply.
This proposal should be ringing alarm bells
in every consumer, every food company and
every food agency of the planet."
Adrian Bebb of Friends of the Earth
Europe added:
"Because of the secrecy behind
experiments in the United States, no one
not food companies, not even governments
will be able to test food products or food
imports for contamination because they won't
know what to test for. This will leave
consumers worldwide exposed to new risks
from genetically modified foods."
Experimental GM crops are currently
permitted to be grown on a minimum of 23,000
hectares in the United States, and some
individual releases are over 400 ha in size.
The approved acreage for GM crop tests since
the late 1980s is over 200,000 ha. They
include crops engineered for herbicide or
insect resistance, altered nutritional
properties, or sterile pollen or seeds.
Other crops generate pharmaceuticals or
anti-fungal compounds that resemble proteins
that cause food allergies. The US government
is not proposing any maximum threshold for
"inadvertent" contamination of
food, feed and seed stocks from experimental
sites.
The new policy sets out loose
"safety assessment" guidelines
under which a company may voluntarily
consult with the FDA to have its
experimental GM crop material deemed
"acceptable" as a contaminant in
food. The "safety assessment" is
based on paperwork and two inadequate tests
that the FDA estimates will take companies
just 20 hours to complete. The proposed
review also excludes testing for unintended
effects caused by genetic modification. This
inadequate review would grant biotech
companies the legal cover to allow their
experimental GM crops to enter the American
food supply. And the US biotechnology and
grain industries are already calling on the
US government to "vigorously promote
global adoption" of this policy [2]
Bill Freese, Research Analyst with
Friends of the Earth US said: "Allowing
conventional food to be contaminated by
experimental crops is a recipe for disaster.
What is even more unbelievable is that the
Bush Administration wants to promote this
policy around the world as an international
model."
Since over two-thirds of experimental GM
crops grown in the US contain genes
classified as confidential, there is little
public information about what genes are
being tested. Without this basic
information, laboratories will be unable to
look for their presence in food products.
This will have serious consequences for food
companies wishing to avoid such
contamination and Governments carrying out
checks on imports. Neither will be able to
detect the contamination as they won't know
what they are looking for.
The FDA policy comes in response to a
2002 initiative by the Bush Administration.
FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford describes
the policy as "a high priority for the
Administration and the industry, to enhance
public confidence, avoid product recalls,
and provide an international model" for
similar policies around the world [3]
In January, the US Dept. of Agriculture
proposed a similar policy for its sphere of
GM crop regulation (plant pest risks). The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is
expected to issue its own contamination
approval policy applicable to
pesticide-producting GM crops in the near
future.
A briefing paper with more information is
available at: http://www.foei.org/publications/pdfs/contamination.pdf
FOR MORE INFORMATION
William Freese in the US, 301-985-3011
e-mail: billfreese@prodigy.net
Adrian Bebb, Friends of the Earth Europe,
+49 1609 490 1163; email adrian.bebb@foeeurope.org
Juan Lopez, Friends of the Earth
International, +39-333-1498049 (Italy);
e-mail: juan.lopez@foeeurope.org
NOTES:
[1] FDA release of the policy was
announced at: http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/ANSWERS/2004/ANS01327.html
FDA's draft policy is available at: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/bioprgui.htm.
[2] 3US Grain Industry, BIO Urge US
Government to Expedit,
"Trace-Amounts" Policy for Biotech
Products, press release, Biotechnology
Industry Organization, National Grain &
Feed Association, and other trade groups,
April 7, 2004, www.bio.org/newsroom/newsitem.asp?id=2004_0407_01
[3] Lester M. Crawford, Acting
Commissioner of the FDA. Speech before The
U.S. Vatican Mission's Conference
"Feeding A Hungry World: The Moral
Imperative Of Biotechnology," September
2004 www.agbioworld.org
This GMO news service is underwritten by
a generous grant from the Newman's Own
Foundation and is a production of the
Ecological Farming Association http://www.eco-farm.org/