Twenty
Questions on Genetically
Modified Foods
Q1. What are genetically modified (GM) organisms and GM foods?
These questions and answers have been prepared by WHO in response to
questions and concerns by a number of WHO Member State Governments with
regard to the nature and safety of genetically modified food.
Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) can be defined as organisms in
which the genetic material (DNA) has been altered in a way that does not
occur naturally. The technology is often called “modern
biotechnology” or “gene technology”, sometimes also “recombinant
DNA technology” or “genetic engineering”. It allows selected
individual genes to be transferred from one organism into another, also
between non-related species.
Such methods are used to create GM plants – which are then used to
grow GM food crops.
Q2. Why are GM foods produced?
GM foods are developed – and marketed – because there is some
perceived advantage either to the producer or consumer of these foods.
This is meant to translate into a product with a lower price, greater
benefit (in terms of durability or nutritional value) or both. Initially
GM seed developers wanted their products to be accepted by producers so
have concentrated on innovations that farmers (and the food industry
more generally) would appreciate.
The initial objective for developing plants based on GM organisms was
to improve crop protection. The GM crops currently on the market are
mainly aimed at an increased level of crop protection through the
introduction of resistance against plant diseases caused by insects or
viruses or through increased tolerance towards herbicides.
Insect resistance is achieved by incorporating into the food plant
the gene for toxin production from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis
(BT). This toxin is currently used as a conventional insecticide in
agriculture and is safe for human consumption. GM crops that permanently
produce this toxin have been shown to require lower quantities of
insecticides in specific situations, e.g. where pest pressure is high.
Virus resistance is achieved through the introduction of a gene from
certain viruses which cause disease in plants. Virus resistance makes
plants less susceptible to diseases caused by such viruses, resulting in
higher crop yields.
Herbicide tolerance is achieved through the introduction of a gene
from a bacterium conveying resistance to some herbicides. In situations
where weed pressure is high, the use of such crops has resulted in a
reduction in the quantity of the herbicides used.
Q3. Are GM foods assessed differently from traditional foods?
Generally consumers consider that traditional foods (that have often
been eaten for thousands of years) are safe. When new foods are
developed by natural methods, some of the existing characteristics of
foods can be altered, either in a positive or a negative way National
food authorities may be called upon to examine traditional foods, but
this is not always the case. Indeed, new plants developed through
traditional breeding techniques may not be evaluated rigorously using
risk assessment techniques.
With GM foods most national authorities consider that specific
assessments are necessary. Specific systems have been set up for the
rigorous evaluation of GM organisms and GM foods relative to both human
health and the environment. Similar evaluations are generally not
performed for traditional foods. Hence there is a significant difference
in the evaluation process prior to marketing for these two groups of
food.
One of the objectives of the WHO Food Safety Programme is to assist
national authorities in the identification of foods that should be
subject to risk assessment, including GM foods, and to recommend the
correct assessments.
Q4. How are the potential risks to human health determined?
The safety assessment of GM foods generally investigates: (a) direct
health effects (toxicity), (b) tendencies to provoke allergic reaction (allergenicity);
(c) specific components thought to have nutritional or toxic properties;
(d) the stability of the inserted gene; (e) nutritional effects
associated with genetic modification; and (f) any unintended effects
which could result from the gene insertion.
Q5. What are the main issues of concern for human health?
While theoretical discussions have covered a broad range of aspects,
the three main issues debated are tendencies to provoke allergic
reaction (allergenicity), gene transfer and outcrossing.
Allergenicity. As a matter of principle, the transfer of genes from
commonly allergenic foods is discouraged unless it can be demonstrated
that the protein product of the transferred gene is not allergenic.
While traditionally developed foods are not generally tested for
allergenicity, protocols for tests for GM foods have been evaluated by
the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and
WHO. No allergic effects have been found relative to GM foods currently
on the market.
Gene transfer. Gene transfer from GM foods to cells of the body or to
bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract would cause concern if the
transferred genetic material adversely affects human health. This would
be particularly relevant if antibiotic resistance genes, used in
creating GMOs, were to be transferred. Although the probability of
transfer is low, the use of technology without antibiotic resistance
genes has been encouraged by a recent FAO/WHO expert panel.
Outcrossing. The movement of genes from GM plants into conventional
crops or related species in the wild (referred to as “outcrossing”),
as well as the mixing of crops derived from conventional seeds with
those grown using GM crops, may have an indirect effect on food safety
and food security. This risk is real, as was shown when traces of a
maize type which was only approved for feed use appeared in maize
products for human consumption in the United States of America. Several
countries have adopted strategies to reduce mixing, including a clear
separation of the fields within which GM crops and conventional crops
are grown.
Feasibility and methods for post-marketing monitoring of GM food
products, for the continued surveillance of the safety of GM food
products, are under discussion.
Q6. How is a risk assessment for the environment performed?
Environmental risk assessments cover both the GMO concerned and the
potential receiving environment. The assessment process includes
evaluation of the characteristics of the GMO and its effect and
stability in the environment, combined with ecological characteristics
of the environment in which the introduction will take place. The
assessment also includes unintended effects which could result from the
insertion of the new gene.
Q7. What are the issues of concern for the environment?
Issues of concern include: the capability of the GMO to escape and
potentially introduce the engineered genes into wild populations; the
persistence of the gene after the GMO has been harvested; the
susceptibility of non-target organisms (e.g. insects which are not
pests) to the gene product; the stability of the gene; the reduction in
the spectrum of other plants including loss of biodiversity; and
increased use of chemicals in agriculture. The environmental safety
aspects of GM crops vary considerably according to local conditions.
Current investigations focus on: the potentially detrimental effect
on beneficial insects or a faster induction of resistant insects; the
potential generation of new plant pathogens; the potential detrimental
consequences for plant biodiversity and wildlife, and a decreased use of
the important practice of crop rotation in certain local situations; and
the movement of herbicide resistance genes to other plants.
Q8. Are GM foods safe?
Different GM organisms include different genes inserted in different
ways. This means that individual GM foods and their safety should be
assessed on a case-by-case basis and that it is not possible to make
general statements on the safety of all GM foods.
GM foods currently available on the international market have passed
risk assessments and are not likely to present risks for human health.
In addition, no effects on human health have been shown as a result of
the consumption of such foods by the general population in the countries
where they have been approved. Continuous use of risk assessments based
on the Codex principles and, where appropriate, including post market
monitoring, should form the basis for evaluating the safety of GM foods.
Q9. How are GM foods regulated nationally?
The way governments have regulated GM foods varies. In some countries
GM foods are not yet regulated. Countries which have legislation in
place focus primarily on assessment of risks for consumer health.
Countries which have provisions for GM foods usually also regulate GMOs
in general, taking into account health and environmental risks, as well
as control- and trade-related issues (such as potential testing and
labelling regimes). In view of the dynamics of the debate on GM foods,
legislation is likely to continue to evolve.
Q10. What kind of GM foods are on the market internationally?
All GM crops available on the international market today have been
designed using one of three basic traits: resistance to insect damage;
resistance to viral infections; and tolerance towards certain
herbicides. All the genes used to modify crops are derived from
microorganisms.
Q11. What happens when GM foods are traded internationally?
No specific international regulatory systems are currently in place.
However, several international organizations are involved in developing
protocols for GMOs.
The Codex Alimentarius Commission (Codex) is the joint FAO/WHO body
responsible for compiling the standards, codes of practice, guidelines
and recommendations that constitute the Codex Alimentarius: the
international food code. Codex is developing principles for the human
health risk analysis of GM foods. The premise of these principles
dictates a premarket assessment, performed on a case-by-case basis and
including an evaluation of both direct effects (from the inserted gene)
and unintended effects (that may arise as a consequence of insertion of
the new gene). The principles are at an advanced stage of development
and are expected to be adopted in July 2003. Codex principles do not
have a binding effect on national legislation, but are referred to
specifically in the Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement of the World
Trade Organization (SPS Agreement), and can be used as a reference in
case of trade disputes.
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety (CPB), an environmental treaty
legally binding for its Parties, regulates transboundary movements of
living modified organisms (LMOs). GM foods are within the scope of the
Protocol only if they contain LMOs that are capable of transferring or
replicating genetic material. The cornerstone of the CPB is a
requirement that exporters seek consent from importers before the first
shipment of LMOs intended for release into the environment. The Protocol
will enter into force 90 days after the 50th country has ratified it,
which may be in early 2003 in view of the accelerated depositions
registered since June 2002.
Q12. Have GM products on the international market passed a risk
assessment?
The GM products that are currently on the international market have
all passed risk assessments conducted by national authorities. These
different assessments in general follow the same basic principles,
including an assessment of environmental and human health risk. These
assessments are thorough, they have not indicated any risk to human
health.
Q13. Why has there been concern about GM foods among some
politicians, public interest groups and consumers, especially in Europe?
Since the first introduction on the market in the mid-1990s of a
major GM food (herbicide-resistant soybeans), there has been increasing
concern about such food among politicians, activists and consumers,
especially in Europe. Several factors are involved.
In the late 1980s – early 1990s, the results of decades of
molecular research reached the public domain. Until that time, consumers
were generally not very aware of the potential of this research. In the
case of food, consumers started to wonder about safety because they
perceive that modern biotechnology is leading to the creation of new
species.
Consumers frequently ask, “what is in it for me?”. Where
medicines are concerned, many consumers more readily accept
biotechnology as beneficial for their health (e.g. medicines with
improved treatment potential). In the case of the first GM foods
introduced onto the European market, the products were of no apparent
direct benefit to consumers (not cheaper, no increased shelf-life, no
better taste). The potential for GM seeds to result in bigger yields per
cultivated area should lead to lower prices. However, public attention
has focused on the risk side of the risk-benefit equation.
Consumer confidence in the safety of food supplies in Europe has
decreased significantly as a result of a number of food scares that took
place in the second half of the 1990s that are unrelated to GM foods.
This has also had an impact on discussions about the acceptability of GM
foods. Consumers have questioned the validity of risk assessments, both
with regard to consumer health and environmental risks, focusing in
particular on long-term effects. Other topics for debate by consumer
organizations have included allergenicity and antimicrobial resistance.
Consumer concerns have triggered a discussion on the desirability of
labelling GM foods, allowing an informed choice. At the same time, it
has proved difficult to detect traces of GMOs in foods: this means that
very low concentrations often cannot be detected.
Q14. How has this concern affected the marketing of GM foods in
the European Union?
The public concerns about GM food and GMOs in general have had a
significant impact on the marketing of GM products in the European Union
(EU). In fact, they have resulted in the so-called moratorium on
approval of GM products to be placed on the market. Marketing of GM food
and GMOs in general are the subject of extensive legislation. Community
legislation has been in place since the early 1990s. The procedure for
approval of the release of GMOs into the environment is rather complex
and basically requires agreement between the Member States and the
European Commission. Between 1991 and 1998, the marketing of 18 GMOs was
authorized in the EU by a Commission decision.
As of October 1998, no further authorizations have been granted and
there are currently 12 applications pending. Some Member States have
invoked a safeguard clause to temporarily ban the placing on the market
in their country of GM maize and oilseed rape products. There are
currently nine ongoing cases. Eight of these have been examined by the
Scientific Committee on Plants, which in all cases deemed that the
information submitted by Member States did not justify their bans.
During the 1990s, the regulatory framework was further extended and
refined in response to the legitimate concerns of citizens, consumer
organizations and economic operators (described under Question 13). A
revised directive will come into force in October 2002. It will update
and strengthen the existing rules concerning the process of risk
assessment, risk management and decision-making with regard to the
release of GMOs into the environment. The new directive also foresees
mandatory monitoring of long-term effects associated with the
interaction between GMOs and the environment.
Labelling in the EU is mandatory for products derived from modern
biotechnology or products containing GM organisms. Legislation also
addresses the problem of accidental contamination of conventional food
by GM material. It introduces a 1% minimum threshold for DNA or protein
resulting from genetic modification, below which labelling is not
required.
In 2001, the European Commission adopted two new legislative
proposals on GMOs concerning traceability, reinforcing current labelling
rules and streamlining the authorization procedure for GMOs in food and
feed and for their deliberate release into the environment.
The European Commission is of the opinion that these new proposals,
building on existing legislation, aim to address the concerns of Member
States and to build consumer confidence in the authorization of GM
products. The Commission expects that adoption of these proposals will
pave the way for resuming the authorization of new GM products in the
EU.
Q15. What is the state of public debate on GM foods in other
regions of the world?
The release of GMOs into the environment and the marketing of GM
foods have resulted in a public debate in many parts of the world. This
debate is likely to continue, probably in the broader context of other
uses of biotechnology (e.g. in human medicine) and their consequences
for human societies. Even though the issues under debate are usually
very similar (costs and benefits, safety issues), the outcome of the
debate differs from country to country. On issues such as labelling and
traceability of GM foods as a way to address consumer concerns, there is
no consensus to date. This has become apparent during discussions within
the Codex Alimentarius Commission over the past few years. Despite the
lack of consensus on these topics, significant progress has been made on
the harmonization of views concerning risk assessment. The Codex
Alimentarius Commission is about to adopt principles on premarket risk
assessment, and the provisions of the Cartegena Protocol on Biosafety
also reveal a growing understanding at the international level.
Most recently, the humanitarian crisis in southern Africa has drawn
attention to the use of GM food as food aid in emergency situations. A
number of governments in the region raised concerns relating to
environmental and food safety fears. Although workable solutions have
been found for distribution of milled grain in some countries, others
have restricted the use of GM food aid and obtained commodities which do
not contain GMOs.
Q16. Are people’s reactions related to the different attitudes
to food in various regions of the world?
Depending on the region of the world, people often have different
attitudes to food. In addition to nutritional value, food often has
societal and historical connotations, and in some instances may have
religious importance. Technological modification of food and food
production can evoke a negative response among consumers, especially in
the absence of good communication on risk assessment efforts and
cost/benefit evaluations.
Q17. Are there implications for the rights of farmers to own their
crops?
Yes, intellectual property rights are likely to be an element in the
debate on GM foods, with an impact on the rights of farmers.
Intellectual property rights (IPRs), especially patenting obligations of
the TRIPS Agreement (an agreement under the World Trade Organization
concerning trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights) have
been discussed in the light of their consequences on the further
availability of a diversity of crops. In the context of the related
subject of the use of gene technology in medicine, WHO has reviewed the
conflict between IPRs and an equal access to genetic resources and the
sharing of benefits. The review has considered potential problems of
monopolization and doubts about new patent regulations in the field of
genetic sequences in human medicine. Such considerations are likely to
also affect the debate on GM foods.
Q18. Why are certain groups concerned about the growing influence
of the chemical industry on agriculture?
Certain groups are concerned about what they consider to be an
undesirable level of control of seed markets by a few chemical
companies. Sustainable agriculture and biodiversity benefit most from
the use of a rich variety of crops, both in terms of good crop
protection practices as well as from the perspective of society at large
and the values attached to food. These groups fear that as a result of
the interest of the chemical industry in seed markets, the range of
varieties used by farmers may be reduced mainly to GM crops. This would
impact on the food basket of a society as well as in the long run on
crop protection (for example, with the development of resistance against
insect pests and tolerance of certain herbicides). The exclusive use of
herbicide-tolerant GM crops would also make the farmer dependent on
these chemicals. These groups fear a dominant position of the chemical
industry in agricultural development, a trend which they do not consider
to be sustainable.
Q19. What further developments can be expected in the area of GMOs?
Future GM organisms are likely to include plants with improved
disease or drought resistance, crops with increased nutrient levels,
fish species with enhanced growth characteristics and plants or animals
producing pharmaceutically important proteins such as vaccines. At the
international level, the response to new developments can be found in
the expert consultations organized by FAO and WHO in 2000 and 2001, and
the subsequent work of the Codex ad hoc Task Force on Foods Derived from
Biotechnology. This work has resulted in an improved and harmonized
framework for the risk assessment of GM foods in general. Specific
questions, such as the evaluation of allergenicity of GM foods or the
safety of foods derived from GM microorganisms, have been covered and an
expert consultation organized by FAO and WHO will focus on foods derived
from GM animals in 2003.
Q20. What is WHO doing to improve the evaluation of GM foods?
WHO will take an active role in relation to GM foods, primarily for
two reasons:
(1) on the grounds that public health could benefit enormously from
the potential of biotechnology, for example, from an increase in the
nutrient content of foods, decreased allergenicity and more efficient
food production; and (2) based on the need to examine the potential
negative effects on human health of the consumption of food produced
through genetic modification, also at the global level. It is clear that
modern technologies must be thoroughly evaluated if they are to
constitute a true improvement in the way food is produced. Such
evaluations must be holistic and all-inclusive, and cannot stop at the
previously separated, non-coherent systems of evaluation focusing solely
on human health or environmental effects in isolation.
Work is therefore under way in WHO to present a broader view of the
evaluation of GM foods in order to enable the consideration of other
important factors. This more holistic evaluation of GM organisms and GM
products will consider not only safety but also food security, social
and ethical aspects, access and capacity building. International work in
this new direction presupposes the involvement of other key
international organizations in this area. As a first step, the WHO
Executive Board will discuss the content of a WHO report covering this
subject in January 2003. The report is being developed in collaboration
with other key organizations, notably FAO and the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP). It is hoped that this report could form
the basis for a future initiative towards a more systematic,
coordinated, multi-organizational and international evaluation of
certain GM foods.
[Source:
World Health Organisation]