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Food Standards Agency Sued Over Bayer Transgenic Rice

gmfreeman | 22.02.2007 18:04 | Bio-technology

The Food Standards Agency has been taken to court by Friends of the Earth (FoE) for failing to take adequate steps to protect consumers from eating an unauthorised experimental transgenic rice produced by the company Bayer.


UK Food Standards Agency Sued Over Bayer Transgenic Rice

LONDON, UK, February 21, 2007 (ENS) - Genetically modified rice unapproved for
human consumption was on sale in the UK more than two months after the Food
Standards Agency claimed it had been withdrawn from the market Friends of the
Earth said Tuesday.

The discovery of the genetically modified rice, which may still be on sale in
the UK, was presented on the first day of a court case brought by Friends of
the Earth against the government agency over its failure to take adequate
steps to protect consumers from eating the transgenic rice.

The incident is the most significant genetically modified, GM, food
contamination episode to affect the United Kingdom, according to Friends of
the Earth.

The legal challenge centers on the agency's failure to comply with an
emergency EU law which instructed EU member states to remove unapproved
genetically modified rice from the market.

The law was put in place after it was revealed in August 2006 that an
experimental strain of GM rice - Bayer CropScience's LLRICE601, also known as
Liberty Link. rice, had contaminated commercial rice supplies in the United
States and been exported around the world.

On August 18, 2006, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that
LLRICE601 had contaminated commercial long grain rice, even though it had not
been approved for commercial sale.

This contamination event prompted Japan to suspend long-grain rice imports
from the United States and the European Union to impose strict controls.

In the UK, the genetically modified rice was found in Tesco, Asda, Morrisons,
Sainsbury's and Somerfield.

The Food Standards Agency claims that by November 2006 there was no
potentially contaminated U.S. long grain rice on the market in the UK.

But Friends of the Earth has provided evidence that such rice was widely
available for sale in London convenience stores in late January 2007.

The Food Standards Agency has confirmed that four of the rice packages
purchased by Friends of the Earth from three different London stores were from
batches that were contaminated with the genetically modified rice.

LLRICE601 is a variety of long grain rice that has been altered with a
bacterial gene that causes the crop to produce a protein that makes it
resistant to the Liberty. herbicide glufosinate produced by Bayer.

Phil Michaels, Friends of the Earth's Head of Legal, said, "This experimental
GM rice has not been licensed for human consumption in Europe. But the Food
Standards Agency did not take adequate steps to prevent it being sold in the
UK."

Friends of the Earth claims that the Food Standards Agency, "ignored
potentially contaminated rice that reached the market since January 2006.
Instead it focused on 'preventing any further GM-containing stocks entering
the UK markets.'"

The environmental group accuses the agency of stating that the presence of
genetically modified rice in the food chain "is not a health concern" despite
the lack of scientific evidence to back up this position.

Relying on the judgement of the European Food Safety Authority that, "the
consumption of imported long grain rice containing trace levels of LLRICE601
is not likely to pose an imminent safety concern to humans or animals," in a
November 16, 2006 statement the UK agency said, "Safety experts have advised,
on the basis of current evidence, that rice containing trace levels of this GM
material is not likely to pose an imminent safety concern."

"However," said the agency, "its presence in food is illegal in the EU and the
agency has reminded retailers of their legal responsibility to ensure that the
rice they sell does not contain unauthorized GM material."

But, "based on the conclusion reached by safety experts," the agency advised
consumers that "they can continue to eat long grain U.S. rice that they have
at home."

In its lawsuit, Friends of the Earth alleges that the agency, "Met privately
with the food industry and told them there was no need to withdraw any
contaminated rice that they found, despite the fact that any presence of
unapproved GM ingredients is illegal."

The Food Standards Agency usually issues a food alert when food companies
withdraw products to alert consumers and local authorities when there are
problems with food, however none were issued in this case.

"Early on in this incident, the FSA decided to do nothing about contaminated
rice products sitting on our shelves," said Michaels. "We believe that the FSA
has failed in its obligations to ensure that illegal GM rice was detected and
removed from the market because it does not properly understand the approach
to GM regulation that is required by European law."

"To justify its lack of action, the FSA relied on a consultant's model to
estimate that contaminated rice would have been removed from the market after
November," Michaels said. "However, the fact that such rice was on sale more
than two months after they claimed it had been removed shows their modelling
was seriously flawed."

Measures were introduced by the European Commission on August 23, 2006, to
ensure that all imports of long grain rice from the United States are
certified to be free of unauthorized genetically modified rice material before
being allowed to enter the EU.

As an additional precaution, new rules were imposed to ensure that imports of
U.S. long grain rice are retested at the point of entry into the EU.

Bayer CropScience said in August 2006, the "pre-commercial rice line" produces
a protein "well known to regulators and has been confirmed safe for food and
feed use in a number of crops by regulators in many countries, including the
EU, Japan, Mexico, U.S. and Canada."

But LLRICE601 has not been approved for human consumption in the EU.

Friends of the Earth's GM Campaigner, Clare Oxborrow said, "We have resorted
to legal action to ensure that if another GM contamination incident happens,
the FSA takes robust action to ensure that illegal GM ingredients are kept off
our plates."

The environmental group is urging the Food Standards Agency to conduct routine
tests of food imports from countries growing experimental genetically modified
crops to help prevent any more contamination incidents in the future.

In the United States, rice farmers have filed a class action lawsuit against
Bayer CropScience for allowing LLRICE601 to contaminate other varieties of
rice.

gmfreeman