Ames, Iowa.
The Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST) is releasing a
new Issue Paper, Safety of Meat, Milk, and Eggs from Animals Fed Crops Derived
from Modern Biotechnology, fifth in CAST’s nine-part series “Animal
Agriculture’s Future through Biotechnology.”
“The safety and availability of high-quality food and animal feedstuffs
are critical to populations worldwide,” says Task Force Chair Professor
Richard H. Phipps, School of Agriculture, Development and Policy, The University
of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom. “During the last decade the area
of biotechnology-derived crops has increased dramatically from 4 to 90 million
hectares/year, and crop varieties of corn, soybean, cotton, and canola are
now widely used and are an important feedstuff in livestock production systems.
It is essential, therefore, to consider the safety of meat, milk, and eggs
obtained from animals fed crops derived from modern biotechnology.”
Written and evaluated by a Task Force of international scientists—from
the United Kingdom, Germany, the United States, and Brazil—this timely
CAST Issue Paper has the following objectives:
1. To provide an overview of regulatory assessments of biotechnology-derived
crops; and
2. To summarize the empirical data generated for assessing the safety of meat,
milk, and eggs from animals fed biotechnology-derived crops that express agronomic
input traits.
Animal products such as milk, meat, and eggs are significant sources of high-quality
food for humans and represent approximately one-sixth of their food energy
and one-third of their food protein on a global basis. Therefore, an important
underlying tenet for the scientific assessment of the safety and nutritive
value of crops derived from modern biotechnology is based on the question
“Is the biotechnology-derived crop as safe as a conventional crop?”
Safety of Meat, Milk, and Eggs from Animals Fed Crops Derived from Modern
Biotechnology provides evidence to support a strong affirmative response.
Areas of study in CAST’s new Issue Paper include
* an overview of regulatory assessments for biotechnology-derived crops modified
for agronomic input traits
* an evaluation of the comparative safety assessment process
* results of feeding studies in farm animals
* the fate of consumed proteins and DNA, and
* conclusions and recommendations.
“Results of the most up-to-date research compiled by this international
Task Force conclude that meat, milk, and eggs produced by farm animals fed
biotechnology-derived crops are as wholesome, safe, and nutritious as similar
products produced by animals fed conventional crops,” says Dr. John
M. Bonner, CAST Executive Vice President. “CAST is pleased to provide
this important contribution to the scientific literature on feed safety.”
CAST’s new Issue Paper concludes with several important pointsą for
future research and action to ensure continued safety and nutritive value
of feeds in current and future crops derived from modern biotechnology. Recommendations
include
* Continue using a case-by-case safety assessment approach
* Assess risks, as opposed to hazards
* Provide adequate funding to regulatory groups
* Provide resources to increase public outreach and dialogue
The full text of the paper Safety of Meat, Milk, and Eggs from Animals Fed
Crops Derived from Modern Biotechnology (Issue Paper No. 34) may be accessed
on the CAST website at http://www.cast-science.org,
along with many of CAST’s other scientific publications, and is available
in hardcopy for $5.00 (includes shipping) by contacting the CAST office at
515-292-2125. CAST is an international consortium of 38 scientific and professional
societies. It assembles, interprets, and communicates credible science-based
information regionally, nationally, and internationally to legislators, regulators,
policymakers, the media, the private sector, and the public.
Source:
CAST paper examines safety of consuming foods from animals fed biotechnology-derived
crops. Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (July 12, 2006)
(http://www.cast-science.org/cast/src/cast_top.htm)
![]() |
|||
|
xxxx
|
xxxx | ||
![]() |
|
||||||||