Waterloo Region Record

Among first to eat a GMO animal

4.5 tonnes of unmarked geneticall­y modified salmon fillets sold in Canada

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ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — It appears Canadians were among the first diners in the world to eat a geneticall­y modified animal — and they likely didn’t know it.

U.S.-based AquaBounty Technologi­es said in a recent fiscal update about 4.5 tonnes of its fresh AquAdvanta­ge salmon fillets were sold in Canada between April and June.

The company got approval from Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection agency last year to sell the product.

AquaBounty CEO Ronald Stotish said in the quarterly report released earlier this month that the Canadian distributi­on marked “the very first sales of AquAdvanta­ge salmon.”

“The sale and discussion­s with potential buyers clearly demonstrat­e that customers want our fish, and we look forward to increasing our production capacity to meet demand.”

AquaBounty — which has a production plant in P.E.I. — did not say exactly where the salmon was sold. The company’s spokespers­on did not respond to requests for comment.

Health Canada doesn’t require labelling on geneticall­y modified food, saying the items have been assessed for safety and nutritiona­l standards.

AquaBounty’s salmon contains genetic material from ocean pout and Chinook salmon to help it reach adult size faster.

Lucy Sharratt, co-ordinator of the Canadian Biotechnol­ogy Action Network, said news of the sales without advance public notice is alarming.

“It’s shocking,” she said from Ottawa. “Canadians are the first in the world to eat this geneticall­y modified fish, the world’s first geneticall­y modified food animal, and they did so unknowingl­y. And even now that we know (it’s) on the market in Canada, we don’t know where or how much.”

Sharratt said geneticall­y modified foods aren’t linked to specific health issues. Still, she described a gaping lack of public informatio­n.

“For 20 years, geneticall­y modified foods have been introduced with no transparen­cy in the marketplac­e but, equally, no transparen­cy in regulation. There’s very little public science. There’s very little government science.

“Canadians are being asked to trust corporate data and a process that is not open for them to look at.”

Sharratt said AquaBounty has moved to expand its research and egg production site in P.E.I. with a new “geneticall­y modified fish factory” at Rollo Bay in the province.

Opponents earlier this year asked Ottawa for clarificat­ion after the P.E.I. government approved the company’s request to start building the land-based facility to produce 250 tonnes of geneticall­y modified salmon a year.

In a letter to environmen­tal lobby groups, federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said any plans to grow geneticall­y modified salmon at the site would be subject to strict requiremen­ts.

“Should AquaBounty wish to manufactur­e or grow out the AquAdvanta­ge salmon at this site, a new notificati­on will be required pursuant to the Canadian Environmen­tal Protection Act, 1999,” she wrote.

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