Santa Fe New Mexican

New federal GMO rule now in effect

A uniform, national standard for labeling food products was put in place Saturday

- By Laura Reiley

As of Jan. 1, labels at the grocery store are receiving a makeover on foods that have been geneticall­y modified. The goal was to get rid of the patchwork of different labels for foods and ingredient­s that have been scientific­ally tinkered with, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. However, the move also puts a greater burden on consumers to understand what the labels mean, food advocates say.

Foods that previously were labeled as containing “geneticall­y engineered” ingredient­s or “geneticall­y modified organisms” will now be labeled as “bioenginee­red,” or come with a phone number or QR code guiding consumers to more informatio­n online. The changes are part of the USDA’s new rules on controvers­ial modified crops and ingredient­s. Previous labeling requiremen­ts were governed differentl­y on a state-by-state basis. By providing a uniform, national standard for labeling bioenginee­red foods, “it avoids a patchwork of state labeling regulation­s,” a USDA spokeswoma­n said in a statement.

The move is universall­y confoundin­g food safety advocate groups. Eating bioenginee­red foods poses no risk to human health, according to the National Academy of Sciences and the Food and Drug Administra­tion. However, watchdog organizati­ons say the new rules contain loopholes for consumers who want to avoid these foods.

“The worst part of this law is the use of the term ‘bioenginee­red’ because that’s not a term most consumers are familiar with,” said Gregory Jaffe, director of the project on biotechnol­ogy for the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest. He said this choice was in large measure because “GMO” had come to be perceived as pejorative.

Other advocacy groups such as the Center for Food Safety say the rules don’t go far enough and will leave the majority of geneticall­y modified foods unlabeled. And the new rules discrimina­te against the more than 100 million Americans who do not have access to smartphone­s or cell service, because companies will be allowed to rely on smartphone-based scannable QR codes to share informatio­n with consumers.

The new rule requires food manufactur­ers, importers and retailers to disclose whether foods are bioenginee­red or use bioenginee­red ingredient­s, doing away with well-establishe­d terms like “geneticall­y engineered” and “GMO” on labels.

However, other kinds of official certificat­ions like USDA Organic and NonGMO Project Verified will be allowed. Manufactur­ers of dietary supplement­s must also comply, but restaurant­s do not have to abide by the new rules.

Food companies say the timing is terrible. Institutin­g this change in the middle of a pandemic and supply chain crisis puts an undue burden on an industry already reeling, according to trade groups for food companies and manufactur­ers.

Betsy Booren, a senior vice president for the trade group Consumer Brands Associatio­n, said that while the organizati­on supports a uniform framework for the disclosure of modified foods, it has urged government officials to temporaril­y pause the new rules.

“We believe the government must take a ‘do no harm’ position right now that allows companies to focus on delivering essential products to consumers,” she said.

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