Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

GE Animals: Coming to a Supermarket Near You?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

It Came From The Grocery Store: Genetically Engineered Meat May Be Heading To A

Supermarket Near You Dear Charlotte,

Genetically engineered animals may be heading to your local supermarket faster

than you think. Though creating animals in a lab sounds like science fiction,

it’s happening right now: Genetically engineered super salmon, which grow twice

as fast as normal farmed salmon, goats engineered with spider genes to produce

silk in their milk, and pigs engineered with mouse and bacterial DNA to improve

digestion.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is currently accepting public comments on

its draft guidance for the commercialization of such GE animals, opening the way

for grocery stores to sell food made from genetically engineered animals. And

the agency is proposing that these products be sold to you without your

knowledge.

The jury is still out on whether food from these animals is safe for humans or

the environment. And the ethics of such changes have yet to be considered. In

fact, FDA says the ethics of engineering animals for food production cannot even

be considered in its decision-making!

FDA says they will conduct a safety review before these foods can be sold for

human consumption. But consumers won’t know if they’re buying food from

genetically engineered animals, because the agency is refusing to require

labeling—robbing us of our right to know what’s in our food.

The FDA draft guidance would treat genetically engineered animals under its new

animal drug provisions.  While the new guidance would require a long-overdue

review process, the proposed FDA rules are seriously flawed. While regulating

genetically engineered animals through the more rigorous “new animal drug”

provisions is good news—meaning each new GE animal would have to get FDA

approval before going to market, like new drugs do—the secrecy inherent in our

current drug approval process is bad news for consumers.  In addition, FDA’s

limited review will only be for efficiency of the GE process, the safety of the

GE process on the animal, and will not require extensive testing of the foods

derived from such animals. Moreover, the review will not cover environmental

issues like impacts to wildlife or biodiversity.

Under this draft, the public cannot know if the review of a product met the

highest scientific standards until after its approval, and then they cannot

avoid the product in the marketplace because it is not labeled.  The FDA feels

it deserves the public’s trust, but refuses to give us the tools to verify that

it is doing its job fairly and adequately.

What’s worse, FDA is not proposing actual regulations, but rather a non-binding

“guidance” document that continues the anti-regulatory shift of risk from those

producing genetically engineered animals and foods to those consuming them.

The public comment period is only open until November 18th – Tell FDA to ban the

use of such animals for food.  If any such animals are to be considered, FDA

must require labeling of food products from all genetically engineered animals,

an open, transparent, and participatory review process of any such genetically

engineered animals, and include a meaningful consideration of the ethical

implications and environmental impacts of genetically engineering animals. 

 

 

Send a letter to the following decision maker(s):

Docket No. FDA-2008-D-0394

 

Below is the sample letter:Docket No. FDA-2008-D-0394 and Request for

Extension of Comment Period

Dear [decision maker name automatically inserted here],

Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305)

Food and Drug Administration

5630 Fishers Lane

Room 2061

Rockville, MD 20852

Cc: www.regulations.gov

 

Re: Docket No. FDA-2008-D-0394 and Request for Extension

 

I am writing to comment on Docket No. FDA-2008-D-0394, " Regulation of

Genetically Engineered Animals Containing Heritable rDNA Constructs. " I am

deeply concerned that the Food and Drug Administration has issued Draft Guidance

that will allow meat and milk from genetically engineered animals into the food

supply without any way for me to know whether I'm buying or eating such food. I

am opposed to Genetically Engineered Animals being used as food and strongly

urge FDA to ban these animals from the food supply.

While the new guidance would require a long-overdue review process, the proposed

FDA rules are seriously flawed. Regulating genetically engineered animals

through the more rigorous " new animal drug " provisions is good news, but the

secrecy inherent in our current drug approval process is bad news for consumers.

 

Under this draft, the public cannot know if the review of a product met the

highest scientific standards until after its approval, and then they cannot

avoid the product in the marketplace because it is not labeled. The FDA feels it

deserves the public's trust, but refuses to give us the tools to verify that it

is doing its job fairly and adequately.

 

At a time when the FDA has inadequate resources to protect the food system and

is reeling under allegations of conflicts of interest, this new proposal uses a

secret approval process wherein no one other than FDA reviewers can see the data

submitted before final approval. And, unlike drugs which can be recalled because

they are labeled, FDA maintains that genetically engineered animals should not

be labeled.

 

FDA has said that each of these animals is different enough from the normal

version that it has to go through a full safety assessment. But FDA has refused

to require labeling, and says that the ethics of such changes cannot even be

considered in its decision-making.

 

These animals are obviously different than their counterparts that have not had

their genes altered. Not only should the milk and meat from these animals be

studied to determine if they are safe, they should be labeled so we know exactly

what we are buying.

 

I urge you to revise your Draft Guidance for Industry on Regulation of

Genetically Engineered Animals to ban the use of such animals for food. If any

such animals are to be considered, FDA must require labeling of food products

from all genetically engineered animals, an open, transparent, and participatory

review process of any such genetically engineered animals, and to include a

meaningful consideration of the ethical implications and environmental impacts

of genetically engineering animals.

 

In addition, given the gravity of the decision FDA is contemplating, FDA should

also extend the comment period for at least another 60 days, through January 17,

2009 so that people have the opportunity to thoroughly review the docket and

submit informed comments to the agency.

Sincerely,

 

Charlotte Butler

 

Take Action!

Instructions:

Click here to take action on this issue

 

Tell-A-Friend:

Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.

 Tell-a-Friend!

 

What's At Stake:

 

 

Campaign Expiration Date:

January 17, 2009

**PLEASE NOTE: All comments submitted to the agency will be made public by the

agency on the regulations.gov website, so please be advised not to share any

information you do not wish to be publicly posted, such as your street address

or phone number. No email addresses will be sent or shared.

Due to the difficulty members have had in submitting comments via the agency

website, we will collect your comments and submit them to the agency at the

close of the comment period on November 18th.

 

________________________________

 

If you received this message from a friend, you can sign up for Center for Food

Safety.

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...