Suzanne Goldenberg in
Washington
Tuesday December 24, 2002
The Guardian
US authorities, shaken by a case in which food crops were contaminated with
an experimental pig vaccine, are preparing to impose stringent guidelines on
a new generation of experimental GM crops.
The department of agriculture and the environmental protection agency are
encountering growing disquiet from a coalition of farmers and food
manufacturers about the potential dangers of the next phase of GM products -
"biopharming", or the implanting of genes in food crops to grow drugs and
industrial chemicals.
The idea of tightening regulations on GM products represents something of
a revolution in thinking in the US, where about 70% of the processed food on
supermarket shelves contains genetically engineered ingredients.
But concerns have arisen after a small biotech firm in Texas was fined
$3m (£2m) for tainting half a million bushels of soya bean with a trial
vaccine used to prevent stomach upsets in piglets.
Under a settlement reached this month, the first of its kind against any
biotech company in the US, a firm called Prodigene agreed to pay a fine of
$250,000 and to repay the government for the cost of incinerating the soya
bean that had been contaminated with genetically altered corn.
US authorities said the corn did not reach food crops or animal feed. But
the episode has drawn unwelcome attention to an as yet experimental area of
GM farming.
The premise behind biopharming, or "pharming" for short, is that genetic
tinkering can turn an ordinary-looking corn or barley field into a potential
drug factory, producing insulin, chemotherapy drugs, and other products for
much less than it would cost to set up an industrial plant.
At present, two dozen trials of the experimental GM drugs are under way
across the US.
The biotech firms argue that the new technique can revolutionise health
care, especially in the developing world where hospitals short on syringes
can dispense edible drugs. But in the wake of the Texas case, questions are
being asked.
The latest incident was the worst violation so far of regulations
intended to keep biopharming out of the food supply. It was also seen as the
most serious setback to date to the next generation of GM farming.
Until now, genetic engineering has been used mainly to make crops such as
corn and soya bean resistant to insects and disease, and the US food
industry has been solidly on side.
The Texas alarm has begun to change that. "The incident overall just
reaffirms our concerns that something could go wrong," Stephanie Childs of
the Grocery Manufacturers of America, which represents food companies such
as Kellogg and General Mills, told the Los Angeles Times.
Analysts in Washington said yesterday that they expected the department
of agriculture to impose more stringent guidelines next year. Published
reports said yesterday that guidelines under consideration by the
authorities include moving experimental farms away from America's grain belt
in the mid-west, or requiring growers to dye the leaves of the altered
crops.
The agriculture department's disciplinary measures against the small
Texas firm have crystallised concerns among farmers, environmentalists and
industry about the risks of experimental vaccine crops getting into the food
supply.
"The department of agriculture wanted to send a signal that the companies
need to take the obligation to protect the food supply very seriously,"
Michael Rodemeyer, the director of Washington's Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology, said yesterday.
"The whole issue of growing pharmaceuticals in food crops has certainly
raised concern within the food industry, as well as among environmentalists
and others, about genes from these crops getting into the food supply."