Vancouver Sun

GMO salmon caught in U.S. regulatory net

BUT CANADA HAS SOLD FIVE TONS, REPORT SAYS

- JENNA GALLEGOS

Geneticall­y modified salmon have been approved for sale in the United States, but labelling complicati­ons have prevented them from coming to market. In Canada, however, according to a report released Friday by the company AquaBounty, five tons of geneticall­y modified salmon filets have been sold so far.

Eric Hallerman, an expert in fisheries and fish genetics at Virginia Tech who is not affiliated with the company, predicts that we will see many more geneticall­y modified fish and other animals on shelves around the world in the future.

The AquaBounty salmon, called AquaAdvant­age, is an Atlantic salmon that contains a growth hormone gene from a Chinook Salmon. In the wild, salmon produce the hormone only when the conditions are right for rapid growth. In the AquaAdvant­age salmon, a regulatory switch from an ocean pout gene makes the fish produce growth hormone all the time, so the AquaAdvant­age salmon grow rapidly throughout the year.

These fish, which are raised in fish farms, grow four to six times faster than other Atlantic salmon early in life, said Hallerman, and they reach market weight twice as fast. This shortens the total production time from three years to a year and a half and reduces the amount of feed they consume by 10 per cent.

Fish farms can be establishe­d on land in tanks, or in the ocean in floating net enclosures. AquaBounty originally intended to produce the geneticall­y modified eggs and sell them to commercial fisheries, which would grow the fish primarily in floating nets, said Hallerman. He was involved in assessing the potential environmen­tal impact of this plan, and raised concerns about it.

The salmon eggs AquaBounty produces are all female, and their number of chromosome­s has been modified to make them sterile, like seedless watermelon­s. However, this process is not 100 per cent successful, and Hallerman and others worried about the potential for these fastgrowin­g salmon to escape and mix with wild population­s. After raising these concerns with AquaBounty, the company agreed to address them, and, “they’ve stood by their word,” said Hallerman.

AquaAdvant­age salmon eggs are produced in a landbased research facility on Prince Edward Island. If the eggs were to escape the facility, they would find themselves in salt water, where regulators predict they would be unable to survive. (Salmon hatch and develop in fresh water, then swim to salt water to spend most of their adulthood.) The eggs are then shipped to a landbased aquacultur­e facility in Panama, thousands of kilometres from the nearest Atlantic salmon population, where they grow to market weight. The FDA and Environmen­t Canada conducted environmen­tal analyses in light of these precaution­s and gave the fish the go-ahead.

Last month, AquaBounty purchased a fish farming facility in Indiana. The company plans to begin sales in the U.S. in the second half of 2019, representa­tive Dave Conley told The Washington Post in an email. When regulation­s in the U.S. will actually permit sale of the salmon remains unclear.

The FDA approved the salmon in November of 2015, and Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency followed in May of 2016. Sales began in Canada in 2017, said Conley. Because Health Canada concluded that these salmon are “as safe and nutritious for humans and livestock as convention­al salmon,” labelling was optional and left up to the discretion of the grocers who distribute­d the filets.

In the U.S., the regulatory landscape is less straightfo­rward. When it comes to GMO foods, “(regulators) found existing laws and stretched out the scope of those laws to cover biotechnol­ogy products,” said Hallerman, “and it’s awkward.”

In some other countries, such as Australia, whole new acts were drawn up specifical­ly to cover biotech products. In the United States, square pegs were shoved into round holes. For example, because many geneticall­y modified plants are generated using a modified version of a bacterium that can be an agricultur­al pest, these plants are regulated as plant pests. Geneticall­y modified animals are regulated as drugs, which is why the Food and Drug Administra­tion is responsibl­e.

That could help to explain why these salmon, which were first developed back in 1989, are only now reaching the marketplac­e. Despite the 2015 approval, the salmon still hasn’t hit U.S. shelves due to a section in the congressio­nal spending bill which requires that the FDA finalize guidance related to labelling before imports can begin.

The National Bioenginee­red Food Disclosure Act (signed into law in 2016) charges the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which regulates most meat and fish, with developing a national mandatory standard for disclosing the presence of bioenginee­red material in food by July 2018. But it is unclear whether the FDA will align its labelling guidance with the USDA’s. Further complicati­ng the debate, Sen. Lisa Murkowski just this month introduced a bill that would require the salmon to include the label “geneticall­y engineered.”

IN THE U.S . ... WHEN IT COMES TO GMO FOODS, (REGULATORS) FOUND EXISTING LAWS AND STRETCHED OUT THE SCOPE OF THOSE LAWS TO COVER BIOTECHNOL­OGY PRODUCTS, AND IT’S AWKWARD. — ERIC HALLERMAN, VIRGINIA TECH

 ?? AQUABOUNTY TECHNOLOGI­ES / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Two same-age salmon in a tank. The geneticall­y modified AquaAdvant­age salmon, rear, contains a growth hormone that makes the fish grow rapidly throughout the year, allowing it to reach market weight in half the time.
AQUABOUNTY TECHNOLOGI­ES / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Two same-age salmon in a tank. The geneticall­y modified AquaAdvant­age salmon, rear, contains a growth hormone that makes the fish grow rapidly throughout the year, allowing it to reach market weight in half the time.

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