The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

U.S. regulators clear path for geneticall­y modified salmon

- By Candice Choi The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> U.S. regulators on Friday gave the green light to salmon geneticall­y modified to grow about twice as fast as normal, but the company behind it may face legal challenges before the fish can be sold domestical­ly.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said it lifted an alert that had prevented AquaBounty from importing its salmon eggs to its Indiana facility, where they would be grown before being sold as food. The agency noted the salmon has already undergone safety reviews, and that it lifted its alert because the fish would be subject to a new regulation that will require companies to disclose when a food is bioenginee­red.

The move comes despite a pending lawsuit filed by a coalition of consumer, environmen­tal and fishing groups that challenged the FDA’s approval of the fish.

“We think a remedy in our case would stop sale of the fish before they’re allowed to be sold,” said George Kimbrell, legal director for the Center for Food Safety, one of the groups suing the FDA.

AquaBounty was founded in 1991, and it has been working through years of safety reviews and regulatory hurdles to sell its fish in the United States. In 2015, its salmon became the first geneticall­y modified animal approved by the FDA for human consumptio­n. But the agency subsequent­ly issued an alert that stopped the Maynard, Massachuse­tts-based company from importing its fish eggs until disclosure guidelines for geneticall­y modified foods were resolved.

Called AquAdvanta­ge, the fish is Atlantic salmon modified with DNA from other fish species to grow faster, which the company says will help feed growing demand for animal protein while reducing costs.

AquaBounty CEO Sylvia Wulf said the company expects to get a final certificat­ion for its Albany, Indiana, growing facility in the coming weeks. Salmon eggs could then be sent from the company’s research and developmen­t facility in Canada, and would be harvested after about 18 months when they reach 10 pounds, she said.

Wulf said it’s been difficult to engage companies in sales discussion­s because AquaBounty didn’t know when it could start growing the fish in the United States. She said the salmon already has been sold in limited quantities in Canada, where it doesn’t have to be labeled as geneticall­y modified. Wulf said she doesn’t expect the pending lawsuit to affect the company’s U.S. plans.

The geneticall­y modified salmon are raised in tanks and bred to be female and sterile, measures designed to address any fears that they might get into the environmen­t and breed with wild fish.

But Kimbrell, of the Center for Food Safety, said the company’s own tests have shown it’s not 100 percent certain the fish would be sterile, and that concerns about it getting in the environmen­t would grow if the company’s operations were to expand.

He also noted the disclosure regulation uses the term “bioenginee­red,” even though most people are more familiar with the term geneticall­y modified. And he pointed out that companies can provide disclosure through codes that have to be scanned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States