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The biotech industry is pushing the
envelope further on the need for genetically modified rice by
highlighting recent evidence that rice imported from certain countries
contains high levels of lead that could pose health risks, particularly
for infants and children, who are especially sensitive to lead’s
effects.
Tufts University researchers in Boston
recently swapped the term “genetically modified” (GM) for “nutritionally
enhanced” so they could proceed with a study testing GM rice on six to
eight-year olds.
Greenpeace called the move a “dangerous
genetic experiment” and said it had previously exposed illegal cases of
GM rice in China.
But now biotech companies are highlighting recent reports which suggest that imported rice contains high levels of lead.
The research, which found some of the
highest lead levels in baby food, was among almost 12,000 reports
scheduled for the 245th National Meeting & Exposition of the
American Chemical Society.
Tsanangurayi Tongesayi, Ph.D., who headed
the analysis of rice imported from Asia, Europe and South America,
pointed out that imports account for only 7 percent of the rice consumed
in the United States. With vast rice fields in Louisiana, California,
Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi, the U.S. is a major producer and
exporter of the grain. However, imports of rice and rice flour are
increasing — by more than 200 percent since 1999 — and rice is the
staple food for 3 billion people worldwide, he added.
“Such findings present a situation that
is particularly worrisome given that infants and children are especially
vulnerable to the effects of lead poisoning,” Tongesayi said. “For
infants and children, the daily exposure levels from eating the rice
products analyzed in this study would be 30-60 times higher than the
FDA’s provisional total tolerable intake (PTTI) levels. Asians consume
more rice, and for these infants and children, exposures would be 60-120
times higher. For adults, the daily exposure levels were 20-40 times
higher than the PTTI levels.”
The research was part of a symposium titled “Food and Its Environment: What Is In What We Eat?”
Tongesayi’s team, which is with Monmouth
University in N.J., found that levels of lead in rice imported into the
United States ranged from 6 to 12 milligrams/kilogram. From those
numbers, they calculated the daily exposure levels for various
populations and then made comparisons with the FDA’s PTTI levels for
lead. They detected the highest amounts of lead in rice from Taiwan and
China. Samples from the Czech Republic, Bhutan, Italy, India and
Thailand had significantly high levels of lead as well. Analysis of rice
samples from Pakistan, Brazil and other countries were still underway.
Because of the increase in rice imports
into the United States, Tongesayi said that rice from other nations has
made its way into a wide variety of grocery stores, large supermarket
chains and restaurants, as well as ethnic specialty markets and
restaurants.
China, a Major Player in GM Rice
China leads the pack in rice breeding
research, where hopes are high for new, insect resistant cultivars.
China has approved its first strain of genetically modified rice for
commercial production, potentially easing the way for other major
producers to adopt the controversial technology.
The approval of the locally-developed
rice, as well as China’s first GMO corn, shifts the global balance
of power in food trade and could prompt other countries to follow suit,
experts said.
It will also enable China, the world’s
top producer and consumer of rice, to grow more GMO rice amid shrinking
land and water resources.
The Chinese Ministry of Agriculture’s
Biosafety Committee issued biosafety certificates to pest-resistant Bt
rice with large-scale production to start in 2-3 years.
But Greenpeace called the move a
“dangerous genetic experiment” and said it had previously exposed
illegal cases of genetically engineered (GE) rice in China.
“If the Ministry of Agriculture cannot
even control the illegal cultivation of GE rice, how can they manage the
risks of large scale cultivation?” Lorena Luo, Greenpeace’s food and
agriculture campaigner in China, asked in an emailed statement.
Everything from developing allergen-free
rice to preventing vitamin deficiencies is being touted as the primary
objective for genetic engineering projects which focus their efforts on
altering rice’s nutritional value.
Rice with Human Genes
The first GM food crop containing human genes is also set to be approved for commercial production.
The laboratory-created rice produces some of the human proteins found in breast milk and saliva.
The rice is a major step in so-called
Frankenstein Foods, the first mingling of human-origin genes and those
from plants. But the U.S. Department of Agriculture has
already signaled it plans to allow commercial cultivation.
The rice’s producers, California-based
Ventria Bioscience, have been given preliminary approval to grow it on
more than 3,000 acres in Kansas. The company plans to harvest the
proteins and use them in drinks, desserts, yogurts and muesli bars and
many other processed foods which will not be labelled as containing
genetically modified foods once they reach the markets.
The news provoked horror among GM critics and consumer groups on both sides of the Atlantic.
GeneWatch UK, which monitors new GM
foods, described it as “very disturbing”. Researcher Becky Price warned:
“There are huge, huge health risks and people should rightly be
concerned about this.”
Friends of the Earth campaigner Clare
Oxborrow said: “Using food crops and fields as glorified drug factories
is a very worrying development.
“If these pharmaceutical crops end up on consumers’ plates, the consequences for our health could be devastating.
“The biotech industry has already failed to prevent experimental GM rice contaminating the food chain.
“The Government must urge the U.S. to ban
the production of drugs in food crops. It must also introduce tough
measures to prevent illegal GM crops contaminating our food and ensure
that biotech companies are liable for any damage their products cause.”
In the U.S., the Union of Concerned
Scientists, a policy advocacy group, warned: “It is unwise to produce
drugs in plants outdoors.
“There would be little control over the doses people might get exposed to, and some might be allergic to the proteins.”
The American Consumers Union and the Washington based Center for Food Safety also oppose Ventria’s plans.
As well as the contamination fears there
are serious ethical concerns about such a fundamental interference with
the building blocks of life.
Yet there is no legal means for Britain and Europe to ban such products on ethical grounds.
Imports would have to be accepted once they had gone through a scientific safety assessment.
Until now, plants with human-origin genes have been restricted to small test plots.
Ventria originally planned to grow the
rice in southern Missouri but the brewer Anheuser-Busch, a huge buyer of
rice, threatened to boycott the state amid concern over contamination
and consumer reaction.
Now the USDA, saying the rice poses
“virtually no risk”. has given preliminary approval for it to be grown
in Kansas, which has no commercial rice farms.
Ventria will also use dedicated
equipment, storage and processing facilities supposed to prevent seeds
from mixing with other crops.
The rice could also be a huge
money-spinner in the Western world, with parents being told it will help
their children get over unpleasant stomach bugs more quickly.
“It’s the same tune over and over from
the GM folks. They say it helps when in actuality it only destroys the
natural balance of nature, the environment and human health, period!”
said GM critic Gustavo Miller about Ventria’s initiatives.
Source:
preventdisease.com
http://worldtruth.tv
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