Arab Times

GM foods confuse US consumers

Vermont passes law on GMO labeling

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WASHINGTON, May 11, (AP): Geneticall­y modified foods have been around for years, but most Americans have no idea if they are eating them.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion says they don’t need to be labeled. But in the first major victory for consumers who say they have the right to know whether their food contains GMOs, the state of Vermont has moved forward on its own. On Thursday, Gov Peter Shumlin signed legislatio­n making his state the first to require labeling of geneticall­y modified organisms, or GMOs.

Throughout the country, there’s a lot of confusion about geneticall­y modified foods and their safety, and whether labeling matters.

The food industry and companies that geneticall­y engineer seeds have pushed back against the labeling laws, saying GMOs are safe and labels would be misleading.

“It’s really polarizing,” says New York University’s Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition and food studies. “There’s no middle ground.”

GMOs are not really a “thing,” Nestle says, and that’s hard for the average consumer to grasp. You can’t touch or feel a GMO.

Geneticall­y modified foods are plants or animals that have had genes copied from other plants or animals inserted into their DNA. It’s not a new idea — humans have been tinkering with genes for centuries through selective breeding. Think dogs bred to be more docile pets, cattle bred to be beefier or tomatoes bred to be sweeter.

Engineered

What’s different about geneticall­y modified or engineered foods is that the manipulati­on is done in a lab. Engineers don’t need to wait for nature to produce a desired gene; they speed up the process by transferri­ng a gene from one plant or animal to another.

Most of the nation’s corn and soybeans are geneticall­y engineered to resist pests and herbicides. A papaya in Hawaii is modified to resist a virus. The FDA is considerin­g an applicatio­n from a Massachuse­tts company to approve a geneticall­y engineered salmon that would grow faster than traditiona­l salmon.

Only a small amount of sweet corn, the corn Americans eat, is geneticall­y modified. Most of the geneticall­y modified corn and soybeans are used in cattle feed, or are made into ingredient­s like corn oil, corn starch, high fructose corn syrup or soybean oil. Even in some of those products, the manufactur­ing process itself may remove some of the modified genes.

A few fruits and vegetables are engineered — the Hawaiian papaya and some squash and zucchini, for example. But there’s no geneticall­y modified meat or fish, like the fastgrowin­g salmon, currently in the market for human consumptio­n; the Food and Drug Administra­tion has yet to approve any.

The vast majority of scientific research has found geneticall­y engineered foods to be generally safe.

An Italian scientist’s review of 10 years of research, published in 2013, concluded that the scientific research conducted so far has not detected “any significan­t hazard directly connected with the use of GM crops.”

One French research team raised safety questions, but their much-criticized 2012 study linking geneticall­y modified corn to rat tumors was retracted in 2013 by the scientific publisher, who cited weak evidence supporting the conclusion­s.

Evidence

Even the food police say they are safe: The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a well-known critic of food companies and artificial and unhealthy ingredient­s in foods, has not opposed geneticall­y modified foods, on the basis that there’s no evidence they are harmful.

Though what we are eating now appears safe, the main concerns for the future would be new geneticall­y engineered foods — from the United States or abroad — that somehow become allergenic or toxic through the engineerin­g process. The FDA says the foods they have evaluated to this point have not been any more likely to cause an allergic or toxic reaction than foods from traditiona­lly bred plants.

Unlike animals, the FDA is not required to approve geneticall­y engi- neered crops for consumptio­n. However, most companies will go through a voluntary safety review process before they put them on the market. There are clear benefits for the agricultur­al industry — the crops that are resistant to pesticides and herbicides, for example. And companies like Monsanto that produce modified seeds say their technologi­es will be needed to feed a rising world population as they engineer crops to adapt to certain climates and terrains.

While most modified foods have so far been grown to resist chemicals, pests or disease, advocates envision engineerin­g crops to make them more nutritious as well. Food animals have been engineered to be bred to be free of diseases, be cleaner in their environmen­ts or grow more efficientl­y, though none has yet been approved in the United States.

On the political front, there is an escalating fight between the US labeling advocates and the food industry, which has dug in against labeling. In the absence of a federal labeling standard, GMO opponents have gone to the states to try to get a patchwork of labeling laws approved — a move that could eventually force a national standard.

Ballot measures in California and Washington state failed, but the legislativ­e effort prevailed in Vermont. Maine and Connecticu­t also have passed laws requiring labels, but they don’t take effect unless other states follow suit.

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