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Biotechnology In Our Food Supply

"Biotechnology" covers a wide-ranging number of areas, but the issue that matters to us most at the moment -- because it hits home the closest -- is bio-tinkering with the food we're eating. Believe it or not, it's already going on all around you. In fact, experts say it's virtually impossible for any American to avoid eating all genetically modified organisms (or GMOs). Even products found in health-food stores, such as tofu and canola oil, are likely to contain GMOs.
 

What's the big deal? Nobody knows. We don't yet know the long-term ramifications of eating genetically engineered food. But researchers mention these potential concerns: increased toxicity to humans; unexpected allergies or other undesirable effects on the human body; decreased nutritional qualities; contributing to the growing resistance to antibiotics; loss of natural pesticides in the products; environmental dangers; or spawning of mutant products resistant to herbicides.

Some argue that it should be OK to proceed with GMOs because nobody's proven we shouldn't. But others argue that until GMOs can definitively be proven safe, the food industry should wait before adding them to their products.

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Who regulates it? The federal Department of Agriculture, the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency share the responsibility of regulating biotech foods. The FDA is working on regulations concerning genetically engineered products and voluntary product labeling, although officials say they believe current regulations do work to protect the public.

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Are current regulations enough? Rebecca Goldburg, a biologist with Environmental Defense has said that the Kraft recall of millions of taco shells (contaminated with genetically engineered corn) shows how "full of holes federal oversight of genetically engineered foods is." And U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer also has argued that the U.S. doesn't have a method for catching illegal use of genetically engineered ingredients or a method of determining whether genetically engineered products are even safe for consumption.

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Recommendations for tighter controls -- In December 2000, a 20-person committee formed by the United States and the European Union recommended tighter controls on genetically engineered foods -- including mandatory labeling of any products with gene-altered ingredients. The committee was made up of people from industry, farm, science and consumer groups.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced a proposal in January 2001 to require companies to notify the FDA 120 days before bringing a genetically modified product to market. The proposal does not require companies to label their products as genetically modified, however.

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United Nations agency says biotech benefits outweigh concerns -- In July, 2001, the U.N. Development Program (UNDP) released its annual Human Development Report which says that concerns over biotechnology are outweighed by the plight of hundreds of million people going hungry. The report recommends increased investment in developing hardier biotech strains of millet, sorghum, soybeans and other crops -- along with consumer labeling of any resulting products.

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For More Information:

bullet National Bioethics Advisory Commission
bulletU.S. Environmental Protection Agency
bulletU.S. Food and Drug Administration
bulletU.S. Department of Agriculture
bulletU.S. Department of Agriculture's "The National Organic Program" - new standards on what constitutes "organic" (it isn't 100 percent organic).
bulletThe U.S. FDA Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
bullet Genetically Engineered Food Alert
bulletwww.foodsafety.gov (Gateway to Government Food Safety Information) - has information in several languages
bulletA long, but nevertheless intriguing article, from CQS Health and Environment, warning against bio-engineering.
bulletGenetic Engineering and its Dangers - a compilation of various essays
bulletAlliance for Bio-Integrity
bullet SCOPE: Science Controversies On-line: Partnerships in Education
bulletState Public Interest Research Group
bulletInstitute for Agriculture and Trade Policy - concerned with agriculture issues, opposes genetically engineered food
bulletCenter for Science in the Public Interest - advice on how to protect your family from food pollution
bulletCouncil for Biotechnology Information - supports the development of biotech crops
bulletMonsanto Company - "a leading proponent of modern biotechnology in order to improve food, health and the environment." (Monsanto was profiled in a June 19, 2000, U.S. News and World Report article called "Kids at Risk," about the rise of children's learning problems and the increasing scrutiny of chemicals in the environment.)
bulletBiotechnology Industry Organization
bulletoneworld.net - "oneworld.net's guides aim to challenge and inform, questioning assumptions and suggesting alternatives on the subjects that really matter."
bullet U.N. Development Program (UNDP) -- 2001 Human Development Report recommends increased investment in developing hardier biotech crops -- along with consumer labeling of any resulting products.
bulletSafer Child Food Pollution page

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