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The Pendulum

About Cleo Dan


elonpendulum.com/2013/01/fda-may-approve-genetically-engineered-salmon-for-human-
consumption/
Cleo Dan
Genetically engineered Atlantic salmon may soon become the first transgenic animal to be sold in grocery
stores and supplied by food service vendors across the country, possibly including ARAMARK, Elon
Universitys food supplier.
The fish swam a bit closer to FDA approval when the administration released a draft of its environmental
assessment affirming the modified salmon does not pose a considerable environmental threat last month.
In 2010, the FDA concluded the genetically altered AquaAdvantage salmon was safe for human
consumption, generating controversy among proponents and opponents of biotechnology.
The modified salmon, engineered by AquaBounty Technologies at Prince Edward Island and grown in
tanks in Panama, grow nearly twice the size of conventional Atlantic salmon at a faster growth rate. They
contain two superfluous growth genes from other fish, including the Chinook salmon.
Proponents of the genetically engineered salmon see it as the future of the aquaculture industry, which
includes the commercial farming and harvesting of fish, while opponents are concerned the hybrid salmon
may escape its land-based confines and interbreed with wild Atlantic salmon.
If the FDA eventually allows the modified salmon to be purchased or sold for consumption, some stores
will not supply it.
We will not sell the genetically modified salmon, said Whole Foods spokeswoman Beth Krauss. Our
farmed seafood standards require farm-to-fork traceability and require producers to provide detailed
information on farming practices and pass independent third-party audits. These standards prohibit the
sale of both genetically modified or cloned seafood and their progeny.
ARAMARK may take a different stance.
Professional experts are reasonably satisfied that the current regulatory guidelines in the United States
and feel they reasonably address the safety of genetically engineered foods that are permitted by
regulatory authorities to be brought to market, said ARAMARK spokeswoman Karen Cutler.
Some members of the Elon community will support the sale of transgenic salmon.
A lot of research is put into genetically modified foods, said senior Marion Copeland. I believe that if
such a food product is to be put on the market, it is because it provides benefits to consumers.
But other members of the Elon community are concerned about the effects it may have on human health
and the environment.
When you take genes that were never intended to be in that animal, its opening up something that nature
never intended, said Stephen Moore, an environmental studies lecturer. Its irreversible.
And if the FDA ultimately approves the modified salmon for market sale, it may not be explicitly labeled as
a genetically altered product. According to federal health regulation, genetically modified food and their
substantial equivalents do not differ on a material or nutritional level, and therefore do not require separate
labeling.
At this time, a decision is still pending on the AquAdvantage application, said FDA spokeswoman
Siobhan Delancey. Therefore, no decision has been made on the labeling of food products from these
salmon.
Several countries around the world have implemented regulations monitoring the labeling of genetically
modified food. Nearly all European countries require that the majority of modified food products be labeled.
Moore said he thinks the United States should consider similar regulations.
People have the right to know and select genetically modified salmon or not, he said. As a community,
we need to become more conscious of our food and work to be more environmentally and socially
conscious of what we eat.

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