

Background on Genetically Engineered Organisms in Agriculture
1. What does it mean to "genetic engineer" an organism?
2. What kinds of traits have been engineered into agricultural crops?
3. How prevalent are genetically engineered crops?
4. Am I currently eating genetically engineered foods?
5. Are genetically engineered foods safe to eat?
6. Can Americans avoid eating food produced from genetically engineered crops?
Federal Regulation of GE Crops
7. How does the government regulate GE crops?
8. Who ensures that GE crops can be safely eaten by humans or animals?
9. What should the government be doing to ensure the food safety of GE crops?
10. Which agencies regulate the environmental safety of GE crops?
11. Is the U.S. government adequately ensuring that GE crops are safe for the environment?
The Benefits and Risks of GE Crops
12. Are there benefits from current GE crops?
13. What are the main health concerns related to GE crops?
14. Can GE foods cause new allergies?
15. What was Starlink corn and was it allergenic?
16. What are the major environmental risks from the growing of GE crops?
17. What was the controversy about GE corn and Monarch butterflies?
18. What was the controversy concerning GE corn in Mexico?
Future Agricultural Applications of Biotechnology
19. What new GE crops are being developed?
20. Will plants be engineered to produce pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals?
21. Will there be GE animals in the future?
Background on Genetically Engineered Organisms in Agriculture
1. What does it mean to "genetic engineer" an organism?
When scientists genetically engineer a plant or animal, they remove a copy of a gene from
one organism and transfer that gene to a different organism. The new gene becomes integrated
into every cell of the organism and is inherited by the crop's offspring. In most cases, the new
gene produces a new protein in the cell, which then provides the organism with some useful trait.
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2. What kinds of traits have been engineered into agricultural crops?
Most of the commercial genetically engineered ("GE") crops grown in the United States
contain genes that provide either pest resistance or herbicide tolerance. GE corn and cotton
contain Bt genes from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis. The proteins produced from
those genes kill certain insect pests when the proteins are ingested by those insects, eliminating
the need to kill those pests with chemical pesticides.
GE soybeans, corn, canola, and cotton contain one of several bacterial genes that protect
the crop from particular herbicides. Those genes allow certain herbicides to be applied to the
crop without harming it, giving farmers more flexible use of herbicides to control weeds.
Finally, some varieties of squash and papaya have been engineered with plant virus genes
that render those crops resistant to those plant viruses.
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3. How prevalent are genetically engineered crops?
In 2003, approximately 40% of all field corn (mostly used for cattle feed), 80% of all
soybeans, and 73% of all cotton grown in the United States was genetically engineered. U.S.
farmers also grew small amounts of genetically engineered papayas, summer squash, and insect-resistant sweet corn.
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4. Am I currently eating genetically engineered foods?
Although most soybeans and a large percentage of field corn are genetically engineered,
the harvest from those crops goes primarily to feeding livestock animals, such as cows, pigs, and
chickens. Some genetically engineered corn and soybeans, however, does get used for human
food products. Field corn is used to make corn meal for products like muffins, corn chips, and
tortillas. Field corn is also used to produce high-fructose corn syrup used to sweeten soda pop
and other sweetened drinks and corn oil that might be used for cooking or baking.
GE soybeans are processed to make soybean oil and soy lecithin, an emulsifier used in
many foods. GE canola and cotton are also processed to produce canola oil or cotton-seed oil,
both of which are used for cooking. Therefore, many processed food products that you might
buy at the supermarket contain ingredients that were derived from GE corn, soybeans, canola, or
cotton.
Although products such as soy oil or fructose sweetener were produced from GE crops,
the process of producing the oil or corn syrup from the crop eliminates virtually all of the
transgene and its protein product. Thus, Americans consume daily foods with ingredients
derived from genetically engineered crops, but our diets actually expose us to very little of the
engineered gene or its product.
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5. Are genetically engineered foods safe to eat?
GE food companies and others have conducted a number of tests to determine food safety
and that testing has not uncovered any evidence of harm. Those tests have included short-term
high-dose animal feeding studies of the GE protein, determining whether and how quickly the
GE protein is broken down in the stomach (which prevents exposure to the rest of the body), and
testing the levels of a number of naturally occurring plant components to make sure they have not
been changed in the GE crop. While some of the tests have not always used the best available
methods, together the results indicate that current GE crops are safe.
In addition to safety testing, other information about current GE proteins suggests that
they are unlikely to cause harm. For example, the bacterial protein added to herbicide tolerant
soybeans is very similar to a protein already found in soybean and other plants and functions in a
similar manner. The Bt protein in insect-resistant plants comes from a bacterium used by organic
food growers for many years (although, because it is produced continuously throughout the
transgenic plant, we would consume more of it than when applied occasionally by organic
growers). GE virus-protected crops contain plant viral components that we commonly eat in
naturally virus-infected plants without harm.
Finally, GE crops have been grown and consumed by Americans since 1996 with no
apparent ill effects. However, since no monitoring of GE food consumption is conducted, some
adverse effects, such as food allergies, could go undetected or could be mistaken to have other
causes.
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6. Can Americans avoid eating food produced from genetically engineered crops?
Although the currently grown GE crops and the foods made from them are as safe as their
conventional counterparts, some people want to avoid eating foods made with such crops. That
is not easy to do in the United States because food manufacturers are not required to label
whether their products have any ingredients that were genetically engineered. Thus, it is
impossible to know whether most products do or do not contain a genetically engineered
ingredient. Some manufacturers have voluntarily labeled that their products do not contain any
genetically engineered ingredients, but no government or third-party verification system exists to
ensure the accuracy of those label claims. In addition, many of those voluntary label claims are
misleading, since they falsely imply that the food made without GE ingredients is somehow safer
than or superior to the same product made with GE ingredients.
If one wants to avoid GE crops, the best way to do that is to buy "organic." If a product is
certified as "organic" under federal standards, then the crops used in that product cannot be
genetically engineered. Thus, products produced from organic crops will contain either no
genetically engineered ingredients or only inadvertent trace amounts of genetically engineered
ingredients.
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Federal Regulation of GE Crops
7. How does the government regulate GE crops?
The Federal government decided in 1986 that the United States Department of
Agriculture ("USDA"), the Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") and the Food and Drug
Administration ("FDA") would regulate GE crops using existing statutes. It is the responsibility
of those government agencies to make sure GE crops are safe for humans, animals, and the
environment. In particular, the FDA is responsible for the food safety of GE crops, while the
USDA is responsible for ensuring that GE crops don't harm agriculture or the environment. The
EPA is responsible for the safety of pesticides, including plants such as Bt corn or Bt cotton,
which have been engineered to produce a pesticide.
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8. Who ensures that GE crops can be safely eaten by humans or animals?
The FDA is responsible for ensuring that all the foods we eat are safe. However, the
FDA does not have any special legal authority to approve GE crops before they are
commercialized. Thus, FDA regulates GE food and feed crops through a voluntary notification
process rather than by a mandatory pre-market approval process. In that voluntary process, the
developer of a GE crop submits to FDA a summary of data that shows that the GE crop is
substantially equivalent to its traditionally bred counterpart. FDA reviews the submitted data and
alerts the developer to any concerns it has about the developer's food safety assessment.
A recent report of FDA's oversight of GE food safety by CSPI found that the process is
not as rigorous or as independent as it should be, and that FDA often does not get all of the data
it needs to perform a well-informed safety review Plugging Holes in the Biotech Safety Net.
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9. What should the government be doing to ensure the food safety of GE crops?
Before any GE crop is turned into food, the FDA should have to formally approve that
crop as safe for human and animal consumption. Congress needs to amend the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require a mandatory pre-market approval process that is open to
public participation and review. Senator Richard Durbin (D- Il.) introduced legislation that
would give FDA such authority in 2002 (S. 3095) and he is expected to reintroduce a similar bill.
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10. Which agencies regulate the environmental safety of GE crops?
If a crop has been engineered to make its own pesticide (such as the Bt corn or Bt cotton),
then the EPA reviews and approves the safety of that crop before it is commercialized. In its
regulatory process, EPA performs a risk assessment to determine the benefits and risks to the
environment from the crop and imposes any conditions it believes are needed to minimize or
eliminate any potential harmful effects on the environment. EPA's approval process also
assesses the safety to humans and animals if they eat the pesticidal compound. EPA establishes a
safe tolerance level below which the pesticide is considered safe.
For all other genetically engineered crops (such as herbicide-resistant canola or
soybeans), USDA is responsible for ensuring that growing those crops will not have an adverse
effect on agriculture or the environment. USDA has established a notification and permitting
process for field trials with engineered crops that developers must comply with before planting
any GE crop on open fields. USDA also has established a regulatory process that allows
developers to petition the agency to deregulate its GE plant, allowing crops to be grown
commercially without any regulatory restrictions or requirements. To date, over 9,000 field trials
have gone through the USDA's regulatory procedures and over 75 crops have been deregulated.
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11. Is the U.S. government adequately ensuring that GE crops are safe for the
environment?
The short answer is no. Although USDA has regulatory oversight over all releases of GE
crops into the environment, most field trials get little government scrutiny and only a handful get
an individual environmental assessment. That is particularly problematic for crops engineered to
produce non-food substances, such as an industrial compound or a pharmaceutical. Thus, before
any genetically engineered plant is grown in the open, USDA should conduct a thorough
environmental review. In addition, that review process should be open to the public so that any
person can review the safety data submitted by the applicant and provide comments to USDA
before the agency makes its decision.
For plants producing a pesticide, EPA usually conducts a thorough environmental
assessment of that crop before it is allowed to be used commercially and allows the public to
participate in that process. EPA's regulatory process could be improved by requiring more field
testing as well as by establishing specific testing guidelines unique to GE crops. Currently, EPA
uses ad hoc standards for GE crops, since its existing testing guidelines developed for chemical
and microbial pesticides are usually not applicable.
To protect the environment, EPA and USDA should implement rigorous post-approval
oversight of GE crops. Both agencies have not done a good job at ensuring that after GE crops
are released into the environment, those crops don't harm the environment. Both agencies need
to regularly inspect field trials to ensure that they comply with government-imposed restrictions
and severely penalize violators. In addition, EPA needs to ensure that farmers comply with
insect refuge requirements for Bt crops. A 2003 report by CSPI found that approximately 20% of
Midwest farmers did not comply with government planting restrictions for Bt crops Planting Trouble: Are Farmers Squandering Bt Corn Technology?. Without better
compliance with government restrictions, insects more readily could develop resistance to the Bt
crops. If that happens, both the Bt crops and Bt microbial insecticides used widely by organic
and other farmers would lose some of their effectiveness.
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The Benefits and Risks of GE Crops
12. Are there benefits from current GE crops?
The benefits from GE crops are sometimes difficult to determine. However, several
benefits seem well substantiated. The use of Bt cotton in several regions of the United States has
substantially reduced the use of broad-spectrum and highly poisonous insecticides. Thus, Bt
cotton provides significant environmental benefits because it has a less detrimental effect on the
environment than the pesticides it replaces. Similar benefits have been documented when Bt
cotton has been used in China and other countries.
Herbicide-tolerant soybeans have simplified farming for farmers, saving them time and
allowing them to attend to other matters. Those the evidence is mixed, the use of herbicide-resistant soybeans may have contributed to the adoption of conservation tillage, which conserves
soil which is more easily eroded when fields are conventionally cultivated. In addition to
conservation tillage, GE soybeans require on average about one less application per year
compared to other herbicides. Therefore, RR soybeans save resources used in herbicide
applications.
Whether Bt corn is beneficial is less clear. Bt corn controls the European corn borer, a
pest that destroys corn on a sporadic and unpredictable basis. That insect reaches levels where it
causes significant financial loses to farmers only once every four or five years and in most cases
farmers do not spray pesticides to prevent those loses. Thus, farmers may buy Bt corn seeds in a
season when pest pressure is minimal and the additional seed cost for the Bt corn seed is not
economically justified. Thus, Bt corn has probably provided modest economic gains and
relatively small reductions in pesticide use. It does reduce insect damage and increases yields in
years when a large number of pest are present.
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13. What are the main health concerns related to GE crops?
Potential harm from GE crops include the production of new allergens or toxins, or
unexpectedly increased levels of naturally occurring toxicants or allergens found in crops. Such
unexpected changes may be caused by disruption of native genes, unexpected interactions
between the GE genes and plant components, or due to the GE process itself. A more remote
possibility is that new harmful substances could be produced by the plant.
It is important to understand that all of those categories of unexpected changes can occur
through traditional forms of plant breeding that have been carried out for many decades. In fact,
the only known cases of increased or new harmful compounds have been due to traditional
breeding methods, not genetic engineering. Nonetheless, it is clear that many genes that have
never been in the food supply, and that could not be introduced by traditional means, can be
introduced by genetic engineering. Uncertainties about the properties of new genes and uncertain
interactions with the native genes of the plant warrant a cautious approach to the regulation of
GE plants.
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14. Can GE foods cause new allergies?
Allergies are typically caused by proteins, and since most engineered crops produce new
proteins, it is possible that new allergens could be added to a GE plant. In fact, several years ago
an allergen was inadvertently transferred from the Brazil nut to a genetically engineered variety
of soybeans. That allergen was detected by safety tests and the GE soybeans were never
commercialized.
No conclusive tests currently exist to predict whether a GE protein that has never been in
the food supply, as is the case with many engineered crops, will cause allergic reactions. Instead,
several tests are used that together provide some confidence that the new protein will not be an
allergen. Those tests have been conducted for the already commercialized products, but often not
with the best test procedures (for more on the inadequacies of the current safety testing at FDA
see Plugging Holes in the Biotech Safety Net.
It is also important to keep in mind that while we consume tens of thousands of different
proteins, most serious food allergies are caused by only a handful of them, such as a few proteins
from peanuts, milk, or tree nuts. Therefore, the likelihood that any particular protein will be an
allergen is small. On the other hand, we should be assured that even the small chance of a new
allergen introduced to the food supply is avoided before marketing a GE food, since foods
allergies can cause death in some cases and significant discomfort in others.
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15. What was Starlink corn and was it allergenic?
Starlink was a variety of Bt corn intended to kill certain insect pests. Starlink contained a
different Bt gene than other Bt corn varieties and microbial Bt sprays used by conventional and
organic farmers. The Bt protein produced by Starlink corn did not pass the allergenicity testing
required by EPA, so EPA considered it to be a potential allergen. Based on those test results,
EPA decided in 1998 that Starlink corn could be used only for animal feed, not human food. The
company that produced Starlink corn assured EPA that it would keep it out of the food supply,
but testing by an environmental organization discovered that Starlink corn had gotten into corn
food products, such as taco shells. Those test results led to numerous recalls of food products
and an agreement to segregate all remaining Starlink corn so that it was only used only for animal
feed.
Subsequent meetings of allergy experts convened by the EPA determined that there was a
moderate chance that the Starlink protein could be an allergen. But because such a small amount
of Starlink entered the food supply, those experts determined that there was a low probability that
anyone would actually develop allergies to Starlink (Starlink made up less than 1% of the corn
crop). Nevertheless, several dozen people contacted government agencies complaining of
reactions to Starlink that resembled an allergy. Subsequent testing by FDA and the Centers for
Disease Control determined that those reactions were not to the Starlink protein, but the experts
were not entirely satisfied that the tests were completely reliable.
Starlink is no longer grown, even for animal feed use. The company that produced
Starlink paid millions of dollars to remove Starlink from the food supply. A lesson from the
Starlink episode is that it is difficult to segregate different varieties of commodity crops like corn,
soybeans, or wheat from each other in the current grain-handling system.
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16. What are the major environmental risks from the growing of GE crops?
GE crops might harm the environment in several ways. One way is for the crop to
produce substances that kill beneficial organisms above or below ground. Those toxic effects
would be limited primarily to the crop fields, but since crops are a major land use, the harm could
be considerable. Initial evidence suggested that Monarch butterflies might be harmed by certain
Bt corn varieties, but additional and more extensive experiments showed that harm to be
unlikely.
Another way GE crops could harm the environment is if they grow where they are not
wanted. While most cultivated crops do not survive beyond well-tended fields, seeds from one
year's crop that are not harvested may grow the following year, when a different crop may be
planted. Those "volunteer" plants may be undesirable in the new crop. If the "volunteer" is an
herbicide-resistant variety, there may be fewer or less desirable choices to control it. That has
occurred with some herbicide-resistant canola in Canada, where control options have been
reduced in some cases.
Mating between crops and their wild relatives (some of which may be serious weeds) also
might harm the environment. Many crops have sexually compatible wild relatives, often in the
regions where the crop originated. In the U.S., corn and soybeans do not have wild relatives, but
squash, canola and wheat do. The transgenic genes for herbicide-resistance, for instance, could
be transferred to the wild relative by pollination from the GE crop. If the new gene does not
harm the wild relative, it might persist and spread. Unlike the crop, it is almost impossible to
eradicate a widely dispersed wild relative containing a new gene. Crop genes in wild relatives
are not necessarily harmful, but could cause harm if they make those wild relatives hardier and
those plants spread at the expense of other species. Indeed, in several cases, natural crop genes
have enhanced the weediness of important weeds. In a recent GE example, preliminary
experiments show that a Bt gene may enhance the survival of wild sunflowers. Conversely,
agricultural genes may weaken wild relatives and cause the demise of limited populations of
those plants. That is especially a concern in centers of origin for the crop, where wild relatives
are important sources of biodiversity, supplying traits like disease resistance or stress tolerance to
crop breeders. Several wild relatives of crop plants were driven to extinction due to gene flow
from conventional crop varieties.
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17. What was the controversy about GE corn and Monarch butterflies?
An experiment performed at Cornell University showed that large amounts of pollen from
Bt corn applied to milkweed leaves, the natural food of Monarch butterfly larvae, could kill
larvae feeding on those leaves. That result suggested that Monarchs might be killed in the
environment by consuming pollen from Bt corn plants. EPA had not thoroughly considered that
possibility when it approved Bt corn.
Subsequent research sponsored by EPA and USDA in several parts of the U.S. and
Canada determined that the pollen from about 95% of the Bt corn varieties does not contain
enough Bt toxin to significantly harm Monarch larvae. Furthermore, corn sheds pollen for only
about two weeks, and for much of the country (except the northern parts of the corn belt)
Monarch larvae are not often present when pollen is found on the milkweed leaves. Some
questions about possible subtle effects remain unanswered, but it is unlikely that continuing
experiments will find significant harm.
While some have contended that the lack of substantial harm to Monarchs in the
environment showed that EPA had done an adequate job before approving Bt corn, in reality a
substantial amount of luck was involved. In particular, the pollen of one type of Bt corn, grown
on about 5% of Bt corn acres, contains enough Bt toxin to kill Monarch larvae in the amounts
often found on milkweed leaves in corn fields. However, that corn variety is no longer grown.
Had that variety been as widely grown as others, Monarchs might have been harmed. It was a
matter of farmer preference for the other Bt varieties, rather than thorough risk assessment, that
prevented that harm from occurring.
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18. What was the controversy concerning GE corn in Mexico?
In 2000, two scientists published experimental results that indicated the presence of GE
genes in native corn in rural Mexico. It is illegal to grow Bt corn in Mexico, so the results
suggested there might be a potential legal problem. Mexico has outlawed GE corn because it is
the center of origin for corn and many diverse corn varieties are found there. Many scientists are
concerned that GE genes might get into native varieties of corn and reduce that biodiversity.
Subsequent tests by scientists to verify the GE gene in Mexican corn were found to be
inconclusive. In addition, some of the more controversial results, especially concerning the
possible rearrangement of the GE genes, were found to be inadequately supported or incorrect.
Further tests are being conducted to determine whether the original results about the presence of
GE genes in Mexican corn are correct. Regardless of the those results, many scientists believe
that GE corn will eventually integrate into native Mexican varieties if it is not already there,
because some Mexico farmers would see the advantages growing insect-resistant corn. Similarly,
it is also inevitable that genes from ordinary hybrid corn will get into Mexican corn varieties as
farmers plant them.
The most important issue raised by the controversy has been so far unanswered. What
harm, if any, will result from the presence of a transgene in a native Mexican corn variety? Some
scientists that study the effects of "geneflow" between species are doubtful that Bt genes would
have deleterious effects on local Mexican corn or wild relatives. However protecting
biodiversity is extremely important. Thus, biodiversity should be protected and a cautious
approach should be taken regarding GE and conventional hybrid corn in Mexico.
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Future Agricultural Applications of Biotechnology
19. What new GE crops are being developed?
GE crops commercialized in the next one to three years are likely to be versions of
herbicide-resistant and Bt-insect resistant crops. New for the 2003 growing season is a variety of
Bt corn that controls corn rootworms. More insecticide is used to control corn rootworm than for
other corn insect pest in the U.S. Those broad-spectrum insecticides could be substantially
replaced if the new Bt corn is widely adopted and if it performs as the developer predicts.
However, EPA did not follow a panel of expert scientists' recommendations on measures to
prevent insect resistance and preserve the use of that crop. Instead EPA followed the weaker
recommendation of the developer. The experts were also not satisfied with all of the
environmental safety studies performed by the company, and EPA required further tests to be
carried out over the three years of the temporary registration.
Herbicide-tolerant (Roundup Ready) wheat is also in the pipeline for review and approval
by U.S. and foreign regulatory agencies. There has been considerable concern about the
introduction of RR wheat among U.S. and Canadian farmers and millers who are worried that
they could lose important export markets, because GE wheat may not be accepted by Europe,
Japan and other countries to which wheat is exported. As with other grains, different sources of
wheat are mixed after harvest, so the introduction of GE wheat might eliminate or greatly reduce
all wheat exports. Several environmental issues with the introduction of RR wheat also remain
unanswered. Regulatory review of RR wheat has not been completed by USDA.
GE crops with direct consumer benefits, such as enhanced nutritional properties, are
probably at least three to five years from commercialization. Rice engineered with more beta
carotene (vitamin A) enhanced rice, so-called "golden rice," is being developed for developing
countries but is not intended for U.S. consumption. A recent GE tomato variety with antioxidant
lycopene levels about four times higher than conventional tomatoes was reported from a research
laboratory in 2002. Those and other GE research crops show that these "second generation" GE
crops are feasible. Research continues in numerous crops, including potato, cassava, sweet
potatoes, apples, and so forth.
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20. Will plants be engineered to produce pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals?
No pharmaceuticals are being produced commercially in crops, but many field-trials of
such crops are occurring. The most common crop used for those field trials is corn. That is risky
if not done carefully because pollen from corn engineered to produce a pharmaceutical ("pharm"
crops) could contaminate food corn in neighboring fields by pollinating it. While regulatory
requirements for minimum distances between "pharm" and food corn are designed to keep levels
of cross-fertilization low, many pharmaceuticals affect the body at tiny concentrations. The
current law does not require the developer to assess the potential harm caused by pharmaceuticals
produced in plants if they enter the food supply. Recently, USDA strengthened its regulatory
requirements to keep "pharm" crops out of food, but those provisions do not guarantee complete
isolation.
Until August, 2003, plants engineered to produce industrial chemicals received even less
regulatory oversight than pharmaceutical crops. Those plants could be grown under USDA's
notification procedures instead of the more stringent permit process used for plants engineered
with pharmaceuticals. For example, the protein avidin was produced commercially in corn under
a notification to USDA rather than a permit. Recently USDA amended its regulations to require
that plants engineered to make industrial compounds receive a USDA permit before they can be
grown in the field. USDA has also stated that those permits will be subject to confinement
conditions similar to those put in place for pharmaceutical plants.
Viable alternatives to growing pharmaceuticals or industrial chemicals in food crops
exist. For example, non-food crops like tobacco can often be used. Other methods involving
fermentation of engineered bacteria in tanks (rather than planting crops in fields) hold promise as
alternatives to using food crops to produce such substances. Even with alternatives like tobacco,
however, regulation must be improved. For example, currently, infectious GE plant viruses are
being used experimentally to produce pharmaceuticals in tobacco. Some versions of those
viruses can infect some food crops.
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21. Will there be GE animals in the future?
Numerous researchers around the world are developing genetically engineered animals.
Animals, such as livestock, fish or insects, may be genetically engineered in a manner similar to
GE plants. So far, no GE livestock is in commercial use. For example, Dolly the sheep was not
genetically engineered, but was cloned (that is, a nearly identical animal was produced from the
cells of an adult sheep, rather than the addition of new genes). Genetically engineered animals
used for research, such as mice, have been commercially available for several years.
When GE animals are commercialized, they will present many of the same risk issues as
GE plants, as well as ethical concerns about the welfare of the animals. The most likely first
application for a commercial GE animal will be a salmon engineered to grow faster. A
Massachusetts company, Aqua Bounty Farms, has genetically engineered Atlantic salmon to
grow twice as fast by inserting into it genes from two other fish species. The fish reaches full
size in just 18 months instead of the usual 36 months. Under the current regulatory system, FDA
will review the GE salmon for both food and environmental safety before it is commercialized.
Many scientists believe that such an application will raise significant environmental risks, since
salmon are not highly domesticated and the GE salmon would likely survive in the wild. Aqua
Bounty will use only sterilized female fish to minimize risks of interbreeding with non-engineered salmon. Furthermore, the FDA may not have adequate legal authority and scientific
expertise to assess the environmental impacts of GE animals.
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