Monsanto GM Smartstax corn risks exposed
source: http://www.commonground.ca/iss/241/cg241_smartstax.shtml
-
-
- JanforGore
- added this
Canada’s approval of SmartStax corn exposed just how little Health Canada cares to investigate the potential risks of GM crops and foods – in the case of SmartStax, not at all. Now the process to approve SmartStax in Europe has identified many of the risk issues being ignored on both sides of the ocean. Confidential industry summaries of data as well as critiques by European experts show more studies must be done to determine any potential health and environmental risks.
No risk assessment in Canada
In July 2009, Monsanto and Dow AgroSciences announced they had received approval in Canada and the US to introduce their new eight-trait GM corn SmartStax (it combines technologies from both companies). However, Health Canada did not actually assess SmartStax for human health safety. Because the individual eight GM traits were previously approved in separate crops, Canadian regulators decided there was nothing new in combining the eight together. Health Canada assumed the corn was a harmless amalgam of GM traits and did not even issue any paperwork to rubberstamp its approval.
In September 2010, the GMO Panel of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) concluded SmartStax “is unlikely to have adverse effects on human and animal health and the environment, in the context of its intended uses.” Unlike in Canada, the European Authority actually looked at some industry documents (summarizes of studies). The German non-governmental group Testbiotech published a report in June that examined these documents as well as critiques from regulators in European countries. Its report points to many safety questions still not being addressed in Europe – questions Health Canada should have asked but never did (Testbiotech, June 2011, “How industry and EFSA have been systematically undermining the risk assessment of ‘SmartStax” www.testbiotech.de/node/515)
More GM traits, more risks?
SmartStax corn is the first GM crop that has more than three GM traits “stacked” together. SmartStax produces six different insecticidal toxins (Bt toxins) and is tolerant to two herbicides. SmartStax is also known as MON 89034 x 1507 x MON 88017 x 59122, which represents the four GM events or parental lines bred together to make SmartStax. The possible implications of such complexity were entirely overlooked by Health Canada.
Canadian regulation is essentially based on the view that moving genes around is not inherently risky. Instead of examining the process of genetic engineering, Canada evaluates the end product using, in part, the widely discredited concept of “substantial equivalence.” Substantial equivalence allows for a comparison of a GM organism with its “equivalent” already out in the environment with a “history of safe use.” Health Canada’s approval of SmartStax is an extreme application of substantial equivalence. The European Food Safety Authority chose a similar approach. As Christoph Then of Testbiotech explains, “EFSA based its approval of SmartStax to a large extent on data derived from the parental plants. But this approach is highly complicated since SmartStax has many insecticidal toxins, thus more interactions can to be expected. These interactions remain unstudied.” (June 28, 2011, CBAN press release: “Report Exposes Unstudied Risks of Monsanto’s Genetically Modified “SmartStax” Corn: EU Member State Critiques and Leaked Industry Documents Uncover Safety Questions.”)
While insect resistant crops are engineered using genes from the naturally occurring soil bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), the risks posed by Bt toxins cannot be assessed by comparing them with the Bt toxins that occur naturally. As the Austrian Federal Ministry of Health states, “concerning all Bt toxins, a history of safe use cannot be argued on the basis of the safety of Bt sprays applied in organic farming. The inserted genes are truncated and arranged with expression modulating DNA parts originating from different organisms and permanently expressed compared to a tight timely Bt spraying schedule.”
Additionally, the Bt toxin Cry1A.105 in SmartStax was artificially synthesized and as stated by Austria, “There is no safe use of the new recombinant protein expressed by an artificially arranged insert such as Cry1A.105.”
In their comments on the EFSA SmartStax decision, regulators from Austria summarized: “A stacked organism has to be regarded as a new event, even if no new modifications are introduced.” This view is consistent with EU regulations and with United Nations Codex guidelines that Canada helped negotiate. Austrian experts take this view because “The gene-cassette combination is new and only minor conclusions could be drawn from the assessment of the parental lines, since unexpected effects (e.g. synergistic effects of the newly introduced proteins) cannot automatically be excluded.”
More at the link.
-
- groups:
- Community, Tech, Green, Earth and Science, 5 more
-
- tags:
- Environment, Health, Pollution, Monsanto, 16 more
-
-
Rochelle_B
-
"SmartStax produces six different insecticidal toxins (Bt toxins)" This is a corn that was approved by the EPA and is now being grown in the US. I understand profit margins and the importance of crop yields. But is consuming GM produce that produces its own insecticide (not one, but 6) really wise? Think of how many things we have developed and then later realized how awful they were.
Why is it that we have to stumble on information like this? Why is it not in the mainstream media?
- 9 months ago
-
Rochelle_B
-
-
JanforGore
-
Rochelle_B:
It is no longer mainstream media in the true sense, it is only a corporate mouthpiece. And no, eating this is not wise and is not worth the ultimate price. Thanks for your comment. Keep searching for information. It is here.
- 9 months ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
JanforGore
-
http://current.com/technology/93098703_gmos-substantial-equivalence-anything-but...
More on the "substantial equivalence" that allows the government to shove toxins down your throat without your knowledge or consent
- 10 months ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
Schnookums
-
I am positive I don't want to eat a plant that produces six different insecticidal toxins.
- 10 months ago
-
Schnookums
-
-
JanforGore
-
I figure since this government is going to continue getting away with this the least that can be done is spreading this information to as many people as possible in order to give them a heads up on what they are ingesting and the further threat to our biodiversity and organic crops.
"SmartStax produces six different insecticidal toxins (Bt toxins)"
Um um good.
- 10 months ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
GRC54
-
JanforGore:
Jan:
How else are they going to kill us off to protect their money. - 10 months ago
-
GRC54
-
-
CalgarC
-
JanforGore:
not for long... i smell a massive world revolution... and i can guarantee you when we take over, the food system will get a big change :D
- 10 months ago
-
CalgarC
-
-
JanforGore
-
CalgarC:
Oh I agree. We are coming. ;-)
- 10 months ago
-
JanforGore
