Guest guest Posted June 2, 2004 Report Share Posted June 2, 2004 " News Update from The Campaign " Permits for " PharmCrops " increase according to new report Wed, 2 Jun 2004 07:41:22 -0500 News Update From The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods ---- Dear News Update Subscribers, There has been a significant increase in applications to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from biotech companies requesting permission to grow test fields of crops genetically engineered to contain pharmaceutical drugs. The Center for Science in the Public Interest is releasing a report on Wednesday about this increase. The report will apparently criticize the lax government regulations in place overseeing these experimental crops. In an attempt to offset some of the criticism, the USDA is promising to disclose more information about these biopharm crops. However, these steps from the USDA are totally inadequate. If these risky crops are allowed to be planted commercially, it will be nearly impossible to prevent the food supply from becoming contaminated by genetically engineered pharmaceutical drugs and industrial chemicals. Posted below are articles from the Associated Press and The New York Times on this growing controversy. These so-called " PharmCrops " are an accident waiting to happen unless they are confined to greenhouses or other indoor environments. The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods is fighting back aggressively against these drug-containing genetically engineered crops. By the end of June we plan to launch a companion web site at the domain address www.pharmcrops.com. This new PharmCrops web site will contain both educational materials and activist tools. CAN YOU HELP OUR EFFORTS? Those of you who receive our News Updates on a regular basis know that we do not frequently ask you for donations. However, we are asking you now for your financial support. We recently invested thousands of dollars in developing new custom software for our activist activities. You will soon get to use this software on the new PharmCrops web site, along with the Save Organic Food and The Campaign web sites. However, a couple corporate donations we anticipated receiving in May did not come through as planned. Frankly our financial situation is as tight now as it has ever been since we started The Campaign. Don't worry, we are not closing our doors. Far from it, we have some very ambitious plans for The Campaign, especially as we head into 2005 and beyond. But it is essential that we increase our revenues in June. We are asking you to help if possible. Please consider making a donation online or by U.S. mail. To make a donation online, you can do so on our secured server at: http://www.thecampaign.org/donate.php If you prefer to mail your donation, here is a link to a printable mail-in form: http://www.thecampaign.org/donationform.pdf Or you can simply send a check or money order to the address below. Thanks for your continued activism and support! Sincerely, Craig Winters Executive Director The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods The Campaign PO Box 55699 Seattle, WA 98155 Tel: 425-771-4049 Fax: 603-825-5841 E-mail: label Web Site: http://www.thecampaign.org Mission Statement: " To create a national grassroots consumer campaign for the purpose of lobbying Congress and the President to pass legislation that will require the labeling of genetically engineered foods in the United States. " *************************************************************** Splicing of human genes into plants regains steam By Paul Elias, Associated Press 6/2/2004 SAN FRANCISCO - Biotechnology companies are quietly pushing to splice more human genes into food crops after the practice was nearly abandoned last year, a Washington-based advocacy group says. The news comes some 18 months after College Station, Texas-based Prodigene caused an uproar by accidentally mixing such crops with conventionally grown plants in Nebraska. At the time, giant food manufacturers called for tighter regulation of such experiments, and biotech titan Monsanto announced it was pulling out of the field. The number of federal regulatory approvals and applications for these outdoor plantings - often called " biopharming " because the idea is to lower drug-making costs by using plants as delivery agents - have nearly doubled in the last 12 months when compared to the previous year, according to the Washington D.C.-based Center for Science in the Public Interest. " The biopharming industry seems to be back in business, " the group concludes in a report released Wednesday that is based on publicly available U.S. Department of Agriculture data. In fact, Prodigene is again growing genetically engineered corn in Nebraska after the USDA approved a " pharmaceutical application " from the company in April. John Reiher, the company's chief executive since August, would not say what was being spliced into the corn, how many acres were under cultivation or where exactly it was growing. Other companies with similar applications approved this year include Hayward, Calif.-based Planet Biotechnology and Ventria BioScience of Sacramento. The USDA has approved seven of the 16 applications it received between May 2003 and April, with the nine pending applications all submitted in the last four months, the report says. Its author, Greg Jaffe, says the USDA has denied only two such applications since 2000. Since 1995, the USDA has approved slightly more than 300 biopharming plantings throughout the country. As late as June 2002, it approved about 25 annually before approvals fell. No human drug made from genetically engineered crops has been approved for commercial use and most applications are for small outdoor plots of less than acre each, the USDA said. Still, Jaffe and other critics complain that current USDA regulations are too lax and not open enough to the public. Most applications, for instance, don't specify how many acres are to be cultivated and exactly where the pharmaceutical crops are to be grown, making it impossible for conventional farmers to know whether biotech varieties that could cross-pollinate with their harvest are growing nearby. Behind the new plantings are small biotechnology companies and university researchers who seek to create inexpensive human medicines such as insulin and vaccines by splicing protein-producing human genes into crops that include corn, rice and even tobacco. The human genes coax the crops to produce proteins, which can be extracted from the plants and turned into medicines. At Stanford University, 16 lymphoma patients last year were treated with an experimental cancer drug extracted from a genetically engineered tobacco created by Large Scale Biology - the first human use of a pharmaceutical derived from a plant. This biotechnology niche had been growing steadily for a decade despite continued attacks from genetic engineering foes who fear such work has not been studied enough to ensure the safety of the nation's food supply if accidental mixing occurs. Pharming suffered a dramatic setback in late 2002 when the USDA fined Prodigene $500,000 and ordered it to pay another $3 million to buy and destroy conventionally grown soy contaminated with corn it had genetically engineered to produce a pig vaccine. The Grocery Manufactures of America, which supports biotech crops approved for consumption and represents the Coca Cola, Nestle and dozens of others in the $500 billion food industry, has called on the USDA to tighten regulation of pharma crops and biotech companies to experiment exclusively with non-food crops. In April, California regulators denied Ventria's application to grow rice with human genes after California rice growers said they feared international customers would refuse to buy their conventionally grown crops out of contamination fears. In response to the growing concern, the USDA plans to unveil a revised review process in the next three weeks that would make public more information on pharma applications and, for the first time since 1998, require detailed environmental assessments on large-scale projects near commercialization, said Cindy Smith, the deputy administrator of biotech regulation for the department. Smith said Prodigene will be the first company to undergo the more stringent environmental review on the two applications it has pending to grow pharmaceutical corn in Texas this year. *************************************************************** U.S. to Divulge More About Modified Crops The New York Times By ANDREW POLLACK June 2, 2004 Responding to criticism that a controversial farming practice is shrouded in secrecy, the Department of Agriculture plans to disclose more information about crops that are genetically engineered to produce pharmaceuticals, an official said yesterday. The official, Cindy Smith, the deputy administrator for biotechnology regulatory services, said in an interview that the department planned to begin using its Web site to post its analysis of the risks and environmental impacts of the crops that are being grown in field trials. " We do agree that more transparency would reassure the public and the stakeholders, " Ms. Smith said. " We want to be more transparent in advance of this technology really scaling up. " Biotechnology companies say that genetically modified crops could be a way to produce certain pharmaceuticals inexpensively. Food companies and environmental groups, however, have objected, particularly to the use of food crops for this purpose. A commonly expressed fear is that drugs might inadvertently end up in somebody's corn flakes. Critics have also complained about the lack of information about the field trials and the lack of public discussion before permits are granted. The Department of Agriculture makes some information about field trials available. But it usually leaves out what pharmaceutical is being produced, the acreage involved, and the location other than the state, because such data are usually classified as confidential business information by the company conducting the trial. The new policy seems likely to mollify critics, although not completely. It would allow the public to comment before a permit is issued for field trials deemed large or risky enough to require a formal environmental assessment. But there would be no comment period, Ms. Smith said, for smaller, more routine trials that receive a more abbreviated risk assessment. The Agriculture Department would still not disclose information that companies consider confidential, she said. The new policy comes as the number of such field trials is on the rise after a hiatus. Companies applied for 13 permits and public research institutions for three, in the 12 months that ended in April, according to a report being issued today by the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a consumer group. That came after a sharp decline in trials that occurred after incidents in 2002 in which corn containing a pig vaccine became intermingled with food crops, even though the authorities said the problems were caught before any such food was eaten. The company involved in those incidents, ProdiGene, was fined, regulations were toughened and applications for field trials slowed. From July 2002 to June 2003, the government approved only four trials, down from 25 in the previous year, according to the consumer group's report, which used data from the Web site listing trials of genetically engineered crops. The report said that 11 of the 16 applications involved a food crop and the rest tobacco. Six applications were to grow corn in Iowa, Nebraska or Texas, states that produce large amounts of corn for food and feed. Some companies, including ProdiGene, are already selling products made in genetically modified crops grown in the trials, the report said. ProdiGene applied for four permits in the last year, according to the report. Other applicants included Large Scale Biology, Chlorogen and SemBioSys. Ms. Smith said that field trial activity is still not back to the level it was before the ProdiGene incidents. Many field trials being applied for now are very small, she said. Friends. Fun. Try the all-new Messenger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
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.