Washington, DC
December 1, 2006
Biotechnology Industry Organization President and CEO Jim
Greenwood today issued the following statement on the adoption
by the Codex Ad Hoc Intergovernmental Task Force on Food Derived
from Biotechnology, in Chiba, Japan, of a U.S. government
proposal to develop a food safety risk assessment process for
adventitious presence:
Today, the Codex Alimentarius Ad Hoc Intergovernmental Task
Force on Food Derived from Biotechnology agreed to accept the
U.S. government s proposal on Low-Level Presence of
Recombinant-DNA Material. The task force has formed a working
group, which will be chaired by the United States, Germany and
Thailand, to draft an annex to the Codex Plant Guideline
addressing the elements of a safety assessment for low-level
presence of rDNA material in food, and identifying
information-sharing mechanisms to facilitate utilization of the
Annex and the data necessary to conduct an assessment of food
safety by an importing country. BIO and its members applaud the
Codex s commitment to ensuring food safety for consumers,
farmers, food processors, and grain handlers. BIO also thanks
the U.S. government for successfully advocating adoption of this
project by the Codex.
Over the last several years, BIO and its members have
continually urged Codex to implement a science-based policy that
governs incidental or trace amounts or so-called adventitious
presence of biotechnology-enhanced events in food and feed. This
intergovernmental task force s safety assessment will complement
the policies on adventitious presence adopted by the U.S.
Environmental Protection agency in September 2006 and by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration in June 2006.
The EPA and FDA food safety evaluations recognize that
adventitious presence is a safe and natural part of plant
biology, seed production, and the distribution of commodity
crops. They have served as a crucial step toward development of
comprehensive international science-based systems that regulate
modern agricultural products. This is especially important in
today s global trading arena as more than 8.5 million farmers
are growing biotech crops in 21 countries.
BIO represents more than 1,100 biotechnology companies,
academic institutions, state biotechnology centers and related
organizations across the United States and 31 other nations. BIO
members are involved in the research and development of
healthcare, agricultural, industrial and environmental
biotechnology products. |