Times Colonist

GM spud declared safe by agency

- KEITH RIDLER

BOISE, Idaho — A potato geneticall­y engineered to resist the pathogen that caused the Irish potato famine is as safe as any other potato on the market, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion says.

In a letter to Idahobased J.R. Simplot Co. this week, the FDA said the potato isn’t substantia­lly different in compositio­n or safety from other products already on the market, and it doesn’t raise any issues that would require the agency to do more stringent pre-market vetting.

“We’re pleased and hope that consumers recognize the benefits once it’s introduced into the marketplac­e next year,” Doug Cole, the company’s director of marketing and communicat­ions, said on Wednesday.

Before the potato is marketed to consumers, it must be cleared by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Cole said. That is expected to happen in December.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e approved the potato in August.

The Russet Burbank Generation 2 is the second generation of Simplot’s “Innate” brand potatoes.

It includes the first version’s reduced bruising, but less of a chemical produced at high temperatur­es that some studies have shown can cause cancer.

The second-generation potato also includes an additional trait that, the company says, will allow potatoes to be stored at colder temperatur­es longer to reduce food waste.

Haven Baker, vice-president of plant sciences at Simplot, said late blight — the cause of the Irish potato famine — remains the No. 1 pathogen for potatoes around the world.

“This will bring 24-hour protection to farmers’ fields and, in addition, has the potential to reduce pesticide spray by 25 to 45 per cent,” Baker said.

The late blight resistance comes from an Argentinia­n variety of potato that naturally produced a defence.

“There are 4,000 species of potatoes,” Baker said.

“There is an immense library to help us improve this great food.

“By introducin­g these potato genes, we can bring sustainabi­lity and consumer benefits.”

The company has already been selling its first generation of Innate potatoes to consumers, selling out its 2014 crop and currently selling the 2015 crop of about 2,000 acres.

Cole said those potatoes were mostly grown in Idaho and Wisconsin, and are being sold in supermarke­ts across the United States.

But one of the company’s oldest business partners — the McDonald’s fast food chain — has rejected using any of Simplot’s geneticall­y engineered potatoes.

Cole said the company plans to introduce the potatoes to other restaurant­s and hotel convention centres as pre-cut and pre-peeled potatoes, where he said the resistance to bruising makes them a good product.

 ??  ?? The new potato grows in a field at Michigan State University in East Lansing.
The new potato grows in a field at Michigan State University in East Lansing.

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