The Standard (St. Catharines)

This spud’s for you

Canada OKs geneticall­y engineered Idaho potatoes

- KEITH RIDLER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOISE, Idaho — Three types of potatoes geneticall­y engineered by an Idaho company to resist the pathogen that caused the Irish potato famine are safe for the environmen­t and safe to eat, Canadian officials said Thursday.

The approval by Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency means the J.R. Simplot Co. potatoes can be imported, planted and sold in Canada.

The company said it received approval letters from Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in the past several days. Health Canada spokeswoma­n Renelle Briand confirmed the approvals to The Associated Press.

“We have no objection to the sale of food derived from J.R. Simplot Company’s” potatoes for human consumptio­n, Karen McIntyre, director general of Health Canada, said in a letter sent on July 28 to the company.

Canadian officials in two other letters sent on July 31 approved the environmen­tal release of planting the potatoes and using the potatoes for livestock feed. Misshapen potatoes not considered top quality are used to feed livestock.

U.S. regulatory agencies approved the three varieties of potato — the Russet Burbank, Ranger Russet and Atlantic — in February.

The approval by Canada means the two nations can import and export with each other the potatoes that contain a gene resistant to late blight, which led to the Irish potato famine in the mid-19th century.

The company said the potatoes contain only potato genes and that the resistance to late blight comes from an Argentine variety of potato that has naturally produced a defence.

J.R. Simplot spokesman Doug Cole said the company has been doing experiment­al field trials in three Canadian provinces: Manitoba, Ontario and Prince Edward Island.

Farmers on Prince Edward Island successful­ly grow Russet Burbank potatoes, Cole said, but the wet climate makes late blight a problem. A potato with resistance to late blight could help.

“There’s strong interest from farmers to get that potato with that trait so they can spray less and have a better-quality crop,” Cole said.

There is no evidence that geneticall­y modified organisms, known as GMOs, are unsafe to eat, but changing the genetic code of foods presents an ethical issue for some. McDonald’s declines to use Simplot’s geneticall­y engineered potatoes for its French fries.

Simplot officials said the potatoes also have reduced bruising and black spots, enhanced storage capacity and a lower amount of a chemical that’s a potential carcinogen and is created when potatoes are cooked at high temperatur­es.

Potatoes are considered the fourth food staple crop in the world behind corn, rice and wheat. Late blight, which rotted entire crops and led to the deaths of about a million Irish in the 1840s, is still a major problem for potato growers, especially in wetter regions.

Fungicides have been used for decades to prevent the blight. Simplot said the geneticall­y engineered potatoes reduce the use of fungicide by half.

The most recent Canada and U.S. approvals apply to Simplot’s second generation of Innate potatoes. The first generation didn’t include protection from late blight or enhanced cold storage. The company said the potatoes have the same taste, texture and nutritiona­l qualities as convention­al potatoes.

Production of the first generation potatoes started with 162 hectares in 2015, jumped to 405 hectares in 2016 and 2,428 hectares this year.

Those potatoes are now available in 40 states and 4,000 supermarke­ts, Cole said, with about 27 million kilograms sold.

“We are pleased with sales in the U.S. and hope they will continue,” he said.

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