Advocacy Groups Call for Halt to Cornell Open Air Field Trials of Genetically Engineered Moths

The Center for Food Safety, Food & Water Watch, and Friends of the Earth U.S., along with the Northeastern Organic Farming Association of New York, are calling for a halt to open field trials of genetically engineered diamondback moths at Cornell University.

cornell

The initial trials have been in enclosed screened cages, but are expected to move to open trials early this spring.

The groups cite numerous unaccounted for risks, including impacts to non-target species, contamination of crops, and unknown evolutionary changes.

The urgent call comes in advance of a multi-agency (USDA, EPA, FDA) public comment period on the coordinated framework for regulation of biotechnology, the three decade old executive branch policy document meant to help describe various agencies’ regulation of GE organisms.

The UK-based group GeneWatch has also just released a report detailing concerns around the GE moth.

“The USDA and Cornell University have moved forward with this trial despite numerous uncertainties in protocol and questions about safety,” said Dana Perls, food and technology policy campaigner at Friends of the Earth U.S. “There is no need to meddle with moths in New York when there are plenty of non-toxic and organic alternatives to manage these secondary pests.”

Jaydee Hanson, senior policy analyst at Center for Food Safety said that the field trial “is moving forward with little to no assessment of the real world risks it presents.”

“Once these GE moths are out in the wild, there is no turning back. Every possible scenario needs to be accounted for. Until federal agencies have implemented rigorous regulations around GE insects, this GE moth trial should be halted,” Hanson said.

The mechanism for these GE moths to control population levels is for female offspring to die in the larval stage, and for males to continue to reproduce until there are no longer females in the population.

The larval moths will die on plants, including crops such as broccoli and cabbage. In its assessment, the USDA failed to recognize that if farms near the field trial sites happen to be certified organic or non-GE, their markets could be lost if these larval stage GE moths were present because genetic engineering, even for pest control, is unacceptable.

“NOFA-NY is seriously concerned about unintended impacts of the release of these insects on New York’s significant brassica industry, both conventional and organic.  As leading producers of cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower, New York farmers need to understand what will happen when [hundreds of] thousands of Diamondback moths are released weekly during these trials,” said Anne Ruflin, executive director for Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York.

Copyright © Corporate Crime Reporter
In Print 48 Weeks A Year

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress