How corporations engineered the non-regulation of
dangerous genetically modified foods
Government officials around
the globe have been coerced, infiltrated, and paid off by the
agricultural biotech giants. In Indonesia, Monsanto gave bribes and
questionable payments to at least 140 officials, attempting to get
their genetically modified (GM) cotton approved.
[1] In India, one official tampered with the report on Bt cotton to increase the yield figures to favor Monsanto.
[2] In
Mexico, a senior government official allegedly threatened a University
of California professor, implying “We know where your children go to
school,” trying to get him not to publish incriminating evidence that
would delay GM approvals.
[3] While
most industry manipulation and political collusion is more subtle, none
was more significant than that found at the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
Genetically modified crops
are the result of a technology developed in the 1970s that allow genes
from one species to be forced into the DNA of unrelated species. The
inserted genes produce proteins that confer traits in the new plant,
such as herbicide tolerance or pesticide production. The process of
creating the GM crop can produce all sorts of side effects, and the
plants contain proteins that have never before been in the food supply.
In the US, new types of food substances are normally classified as food
additives, which must undergo extensive testing, including long-term
animal feeding studies.
[4]
If approved, the label of food products containing the additive must list it as an ingredient.
There
is an exception, however, for substances that are deemed “generally
recognized as safe” (GRAS). GRAS status allows a product to be
commercialized without any additional testing. According to US law, to
be considered GRAS the substance must be the subject of a substantial
amount of peer-reviewed published studies (or equivalent) and there
must be overwhelming consensus among the scientific community that the
product is safe. GM foods had neither.
Nonetheless, in a precedent-setting move that some experts contend was
illegal, in 1992 the FDA declared that GM crops are GRAS as long as
their producers say they are. Thus, the FDA does not require
any safety evaluations or labels whatsoever. A company can even introduce a GM food to the market without telling the agency.
Such a lenient approach to GM
crops was largely the result of Monsanto’s legendary influence over the
US government. According to the
New York Times, “What Monsanto
wished for from Washington, Monsanto and, by extension, the
biotechnology industry got. . . . When the company abruptly decided
that it needed to throw off the regulations and speed its foods to
market, the White House quickly ushered through an unusually generous
policy of self-policing.” According to Dr. Henry Miller, who had a
leading role in biotechnology issues at the FDA from 1979 to 1994, “In
this area, the
U.S. government agencies have done exactly what big agribusiness has asked them to do and told them to do.”
Following Monsanto’s lead, in
1992 the Council on Competitiveness chaired by Vice President Dan
Quayle identified GM crops as an industry that could increase US
exports. On May 26, Quayle announced “reforms” to “speed up and
simplify the process of bringing” GM products to market without “being
hampered by unnecessary regulation.”
[5]
Three days later, the FDA policy on non-regulation was unveiled.
The person who oversaw its
development was the FDA’s Deputy Commissioner for Policy, Michael
Taylor, whose position had been created especially for him in 1991.
Prior to that, Taylor was an outside attorney for both Monsanto and the
Food Biotechnology Council. After working at the FDA, he became
Monsanto’s vice president.
Covering up health dangers
The policy he oversaw needed
to create the impression that unintended effects from GM crops were not
an issue. Otherwise their GRAS status would be undermined. But internal
memos made public from a lawsuit showed that the overwhelming consensus
among the agency scientists was that GM crops can have unpredictable,
hard-to-detect side effects. Various departments and experts spelled
these out in detail, listing allergies, toxins, nutritional effects,
and new diseases as potential problems. They had urged superiors to
require long-term safety studies.
[6]
In spite of the warnings, according to public interest attorney Steven
Druker who studied the FDA’s internal files, “References to the
unintended negative effects of bioengineering were progressively
deleted from drafts of the policy statement (over the protests of
agency scientists).”
[7]
FDA microbiologist Louis
Pribyl wrote about the policy, “What has happened to the scientific
elements of this document? Without a sound scientific base to rest on,
this becomes a broad, general, ‘What do I have to do to avoid
trouble’-type document. . . . It will look like and probably be just a
political document. . . . It reads very pro-industry, especially in the
area of unintended effects.”
[8]
The FDA scientists’ concerns
were not only ignored, their very existence was denied. Consider the
private memo summarizing opinions at the FDA, which stated, “The
processes of genetic engineering and traditional breeding are different
and according to the technical experts in the agency, they lead to
different risks.”
[9]
Contrast that with the official policy statement: “The agency is not
aware of any information showing that foods derived by these new
methods differ from other foods in any meaningful or uniform way.”
[10]
On the basis of this manufactured and false notion of no meaningful
differences, the FDA does not require GM food safety testing.
To further justify their lack
of oversight, they claimed that GM crops were “substantially
equivalent” to their natural counterparts. But this concept does not
hold up to scrutiny. The Royal Society of Canada described substantial
equivalence as “scientifically unjustifiable and inconsistent with
precautionary regulation of the technology.” In sharp contrast to the
FDA’s position, the Royal Society of Canada said that “the default
prediction” for GM crops would include “a range of collateral changes
in expression of other genes, changes in the pattern of proteins
produced and/or changes in metabolic activities.”
[11]
Fake safety assessments
Biotech companies do participate in a
voluntary
consultation process with the FDA, but it is derided by critics as a
meaningless exercise. Companies can submit whatever information they
choose, and the FDA does not conduct or commission any studies of their
own. Former EPA scientist Doug Gurian-Sherman, who analyzed FDA review
records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, states flatly,
“It is clear that FDA’s current voluntary notification process (even if
made mandatory) is not up to the task of ensuring the safety of future
GE [genetically engineered] crops.” He says, “The FDA consultation
process does not allow the agency to require submission of data, misses
obvious errors in company-submitted data summaries, provides
insufficient testing guidance, and does not require sufficiently
detailed data to enable the FDA to assure that GE crops are safe to
eat.”
[12]
Similarly, a Friends of the Earth review of company and FDA documents concluded:
“If industry chooses to
submit faulty, unpublishable studies, it does so without consequence.
If it should respond to an agency request with deficient data, it does
so without reprimand or follow-up. . . . If a company finds it
disadvantageous to characterize its product, then its properties remain
uncertain or unknown. If a corporation chooses to ignore scientifically
sound testing standards . . . then faulty tests are conducted instead,
and the results are considered legitimate. In the area of genetically
engineered food regulation, the ‘competent’ agencies rarely if ever
(know how to) conduct independent research to verify or supplement
industry findings.”
[13]
At the end of the
consultation, the FDA doesn’t actually approve the crops. Rather, they
issue a letter including a statement such as the following:
“Based on the safety and
nutritional assessment you have conducted, it is our understanding that
Monsanto has concluded that corn products derived from this new variety
are not materially different in composition, safety, and other relevant
parameters from corn currently on the market, and that the genetically
modified corn does not raise issues that would require premarket review
or approval by FDA. . . . As you are aware, it is Monsanto’s
responsibility to ensure that foods marketed by the firm are safe,
wholesome and in compliance with all applicable legal and regulatory
requirements.”
[14]
The National Academy of Sciences and even the pro-GM Royal Society of London
[15]
describe the US system as inadequate and flawed. The editor of the prestigious journal
Lancet said
,
“It is astounding that the US Food and Drug Administration has not
changed their stance on genetically modified food adopted in 1992. . .
. The policy is that genetically modified crops will receive the same
consideration for potential health risks as any other new crop plant.
This stance is taken despite good reasons to believe that specific
risks may exist. . . . Governments should never have allowed these
products into the food chain without insisting on rigorous testing for
effects on health.”
[16]
Promoting and regulating don’t mix
The FDA and other regulatory
agencies are officially charged with both regulating biotech products
and promoting them—a clear conflict. Suzanne Wuerthele, a US EPA
toxicologist, says, “This technology is being promoted, in the face of
concerns by respectable scientists and in the face of data to the
contrary, by the very agencies which are supposed to be protecting
human health and the environment. The bottom line in my view is that we
are confronted with the most powerful technology the world has ever
known, and it is being rapidly deployed with almost no thought
whatsoever to its consequences.”
Canadian regulators are
similarly conflicted. The Royal Society of Canada reported that, “In
meetings with senior managers from the various Canadian regulatory
departments . . . their responses uniformly stressed the importance of
maintaining a favorable climate for the biotechnology industry to
develop new products and submit them for approval on the Canadian
market. . . . The conflict of interest involved in both promoting and
regulating an industry or technology . . . is also a factor in the
issue of maintaining the transparency, and therefore the scientific
integrity, of the regulatory process. In effect, the public interest in
a regulatory system that is ‘science based’—that meets scientific
standards of objectivity, a major aspect of which is full openness to
scientific peer review—is significantly compromised when that openness
is negotiated away by regulators in exchange for cordial and supportive
relationships with the industries being regulated.”
[17]
The conflict of interest
among scientists at the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) GMO Panel
is quite explicit. According to Friends of the Earth, “One member has
direct financial links with the biotech industry and others have
indirect links, such as close involvement with major conferences
organized by the biotech industry. Two members have even appeared in
promotional videos produced by the biotech industry. . . . Several
members of the Panel, including the chair Professor Kuiper, have been
involved with the EU-funded ENTRANSFOOD project. The aim of this
project was to agree [to] safety assessment, risk management and risk
communication procedures that would ‘facilitate market introduction of
GMOs in Europe, and therefore bring the European industry in a
competitive position.’ Professor Kuiper, who coordinated the
ENTRANSFOOD project, sat on a working group that also included staff
from Monsanto, Bayer CropScience and Syngenta.” The report concludes
that EFSA is “being used to create a false impression of scientific
agreement when the real situation is one of intense and continuing
debate and uncertainty.”
[18]
This parallels the deceptive façade at the FDA.
The pro-GM European
Commission repeats the same ruse. According to leaked documents
obtained by Friends of the Earth, while they privately appreciate “the
uncertainties and gaps in knowledge that exist in relation to the
safety of GM crops . . . the Commission normally keeps this uncertainty
concealed from the public whilst presenting its decisions about the
safety of GM crops and foods as being certain and scientifically
based.” Further, in private “they frequently criticize the European
Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and its assessments of the safety of GM
foods and crops, even though the Commission relies on these evaluations
to make recommendations to member states. . . [and] to justify its
decisions to approve new GM foods.”
[19]
For example, the Commission privately condemned the submission
information for one crop as “mixed, scarce, delivered consecutively all
over years, and not convincing.” They said there is “No sufficient
experimental evidence to assess the safety.”
[20]
Evaluations miss most health problems
Although the body of safety
studies on GM foods is quite small, it has verified the concerns
expressed by FDA scientists and others.
-
The gene inserted into plant DNA may produce a protein that is inherently unhealthy.
-
The inserted gene has been
found to transfer into human gut bacteria and may even end up in human
cellular DNA, where it might produce its protein over the long-term.
-
Toxic substances in GM animal feed might bioaccumulate into milk and meat products.
-
Farmer and medical reports link GM feed to thousands of sick, sterile, and dead animals.
But there is not a single government safety assessment program in the world that is competent to even
identify most of these potential health problems, let alone protect its citizens from the effects.
[21]
A review of approved GM crops in Canada by professor E.
Ann Clark, for example, reveals that 70% (28 of 40) “of the currently
available GM crops . . . have not been subjected to any actual lab or
animal toxicity testing, either as refined oils for direct human
consumption or indirectly as feedstuffs for livestock. The same finding
pertains to all three GM tomato Decisions, the only GM flax, and to
five GM corn crops.” In the remaining 30% (12) of the other crops
tested, animals were
not
fed the whole GM feed. They were given just the isolated GM protein
that the plant was engineered to produce. But even this protein was not
extracted from the actual GM plant. Rather, it was manufactured in
genetically engineered bacteria. This method of testing would never
identify problems associated with collateral damage to GM plant DNA,
unpredicted changes in the GM protein, transfer of genes to bacteria or
human cells, excessive herbicide residues, or accumulation of toxins in
the food chain, among others. Clark asks, “Where are the trials showing
lack of harm to fed livestock, or that meat and milk from livestock fed
on GM feedstuffs are safe?”
[22]
Epidemiologist and GM safety
expert Judy Carman shows that assessments by Food Safety Australia New
Zealand (FSANZ) similarly overlook serious potential problems,
including
cancer, birth defects, or long-term effects of nutritional deficiencies.
[23]
“A review of twelve reports
covering twenty-eight GM crops - four soy, three corn, ten potatoes,
eight canola, one sugar beet and two cotton - revealed no feeding
trials on people. In addition, one of the GM corn varieties had gone
untested on animals. Some seventeen foods involved testing with only a
single oral gavage (a type of forced-feeding), with observation for
seven to fourteen days, and only of the substance that had been
genetically engineered to appear [the GM protein], not the whole food.
Such testing assumes that the only new substance that will appear in
the food is the one genetically engineered to appear, that the GM
plant-produced substance will act in the same manner as the tested
substance that was obtained from another source [GM bacteria], and that
the substance will create disease within a few days. All are untested
hypotheses and make a mockery of GM proponents’ claims that the risk
assessment of GM foods is based on sound science. Furthermore, where
the whole food was given to animals to eat, sample sizes were often
very low - for example, five to six cows per group for Roundup Ready
soy - and they were fed for only four weeks.”
[24]
Hidden information, lack of standards, and breaking laws
Companies claim that their
submissions to government regulators are “confidential business
information” so they are kept secret. Some industry studies that have
been forced into the public domain through Freedom of Information
requests or lawsuits have been appalling in design and execution. This
is due in part to the lack of
meaningful and consistent standards required for assessments.
Gurian-Sherman says of the FDA’s voluntary consultation, “Some
submissions are hundreds of pages long while others are only 10 or 20.”
[25]
A Friends of the Earth report on US regulation and corporate testing
practices states, “Without standardization, companies can and do design
test procedures to get the results they want.”
[26]
Regulators also reference international standards as it suits them.
According to the Centre for Integrated Research in Biosafety, for
example, FSANZ “relaxed adherence to international standards for safety
testing when that better suited the Applicant’s submitted work, and
imposed international standards whenever that was a lower standard than
we recommended.”
[27]
Regulators also break laws.
The declaration of GRAS status by the FDA deviated from the Food and
Cosmetic Act and years of legal precedent. In Europe, the law requires
that when EFSA and member states have different opinions, they “are
obliged to co-operate with a view to either resolving the divergence or
preparing a joint document clarifying the contentious scientific issues
and identifying the relevant uncertainties in the data.”
[28]
According to FOE, in the case of
all GM crop reviews, none of these legal obligations were followed.
[29]
Humans as guinea pigs
Since GM foods are not
properly tested before they enter the market, consumers are the guinea
pigs. But this doesn’t even qualify as an experiment. There are no
controls and no monitoring. Without post-marketing surveillance, the
chances of tracing health problems to GM food are low. The incidence of
a disease would have to increase dramatically before it was noticed,
meaning that millions may have to get sick before a change is
investigated. Tracking the impact of GM foods is even more difficult in
North America, where the foods are not labeled. Regulators at Health
Canada announced in 2002 that they would monitor Canadians for health
problems from eating GM foods. A spokesperson said, “I think it’s just
prudent and what the public expects, that we will keep a careful eye on
the health of Canadians.” But according to CBC TV news, Health Canada
“abandoned that research less than a year later saying it was ‘too
difficult to put an effective surveillance system in place.’” The news
anchor added, “So at this point, there is little research into the
health effects of genetically modified food. So will we ever know for
sure if it’s safe?”
[30]
Not with the biotech
companies in charge. Consider the following statement in a report
submitted to county officials in California by pro-GM members of a task
force. “[It is] generally agreed that long-term monitoring of the human
health risks of GM food through epidemiological studies is not
necessary because there is no scientific evidence suggesting any
long-term harm from these foods.”
[31]
Note the circular logic: Because no long-term epidemiological studies
are in place, we have no evidence showing long-term harm. And since we
don’t have any evidence of long-term harm, we don’t need studies to
look for it.
What are these people
thinking? Insight into the pro-GM mindset was provided by Dan Glickman,
the US Secretary of Agriculture under President Clinton.
“What I saw
generically on the pro-biotech side was the attitude that the
technology was good, and that it was almost immoral to say that it
wasn’t good, because it was going to solve the problems of the human
race and feed the hungry and clothe the naked. . . . And there was a
lot of money that had been invested in this, and if you’re against it,
you’re Luddites, you’re stupid. That, frankly, was the side our
government was on. Without thinking, we had basically taken this issue
as a trade issue and they, whoever ‘they’ were, wanted to keep our
product out of their market. And they were foolish, or stupid, and
didn’t have an effective regulatory system. There was rhetoric like
that even here in this department. You felt like you were almost an
alien, disloyal, by trying to present an open-minded view on some of
the issues being raised. So I pretty much spouted the rhetoric that
everybody else around here spouted; it was written into my speeches.”
[32]
Fortunately, not everyone
feels that questioning GM foods is disloyal. On the contrary, millions
of people around the world are unwilling to participate in this
uncontrolled experiment. They refuse to eat GM foods. Manufacturers in
Europe and Japan have committed to avoid using GM ingredients. And the
US natural foods industry, not waiting for the government to test or
label GMOs, is now engaged in removing all remaining GM ingredients
from their sector using a third party verification system. The Campaign
for Healthier Eating in America will circulate non-GMO shopping guides
in stores nationwide so that consumers have clear, healthy non-GMO
choices. With no governmental regulation of biotech corporations, it is
left to consumers to protect themselves.
To learn how to opt-out of the eating GMOs and to find non-GM alternative brands, visit
www.responsibletechnology.org
.
New Book
Genetic Roulette Documents Serious Health Dangers
The sourcebook for the Campaign is the newly released
Genetic Roulette: The Documented Health Risks of Genetically Engineered Foods.
With input from more than 30 scientists over two years, it presents 65
health risks of GM foods and why current safety assessments are not
competent to protect us from most of them. The book documents lab
animals with damage to virtually every system and organ studied;
thousands of sick, sterile, or dead livestock; and people around the
world who have traced toxic or allergic reactions to eating GM
products, breathing GM pollen, or touching GM crops at harvest. It also
exposes many incorrect assumptions that were used to support GM
approvals. Organizations worldwide are presenting the book to policy
makers as evidence that GM foods are unsafe and need to be removed
immediately.
But we don’t need to wait for
governments to step in. We can make healthier choices for ourselves,
our families, and our schools now, and together we can inspire the
tipping point for healthier, non-GM eating in America. We believe that
this can be achieved within the next 24 months.
*******
The GM crops
sold in the US include soy (including soy lecithin used in chocolate
and thousands of other products as an emulsifier), corn (including high
fructose corn syrup), cottonseed and canola (both used in vegetable
oil), Hawaiian papaya, and a small amount of zucchini and crook-neck
squash. There is also alfalfa for cattle (the sale of which was halted
by a federal judge on March 13, 2007), GM additives such as aspartame,
and milk from cows treated with GM bovine growth hormone. There is not
yet any GM popcorn, white corn or blue corn. And the industry is
threatening to introduce GM sugar from sugar beets next year. To learn
more, for online shopping guides and to find out how to get involved,
go to
www.ResponsibleTechnology.org
.
The Institute for Responsible
Technology’s plans to achieve the tipping point on GMOs through
consumer education has inspired the Mercola.com
Foundation to match donations and membership fees to the Institute at
this time. Please help end the genetic engineering of our food supply
by contributing to the implementation of this important project.
Click here
.
Jeffrey M. Smith is the author of the newly released book,
Genetic Roulette:
The documented health risks of genetically engineered foods.
He is the director of the Institute for Responsible Technology and the
Campaign for Healthier Eating in America, the international bestselling
author of
Seeds of Deception, and the producer of the DVD
Hidden Dangers in Kids’ Meals.
[3]
Jeffrey M. Smith, Seeds of Deception, (Iowa: Yes! Books, 2003), 224.
[4]
See Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA)
[5]
Dan Quayle, “Speech in the Indian Treaty Room of the Old Executive Office Building,” May 26, 1992.
[6]
See Smith, Seeds of Deception; and for copies of FDA memos, see The Alliance for Bio-Integrity,
www.biointegrity.org