Title: SAFETY OF GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOODS
1SAFETY OF GENETICALLYMODIFIED FOODS
2Is GM food safe?
- All food presents some risk to the consumer
- Non-GM risks include
- Food allergens
- Toxic agrochemicals (pesticides etc)
- Microbial contamination
- Mycotoxin contamination
- Food toxins (lectins, alkaloids etc)
- BSE
3What are the issues for GM food?
- GM food has been on the market in the US for 10
years with no ill effects reported - Risk assessment eg
- Any changes in nutritional composition
- History of safe use of substances in the GM food
(toxicity, allergenicity etc) - Stability
- Unexpected products (secondary metabolites etc)
- NB Processed foods are not
- themselves GMOs
4Any unintended consequences of genetic
modification?EU project looked at GM vs non-GM
potato
- Analyzed
- Glycoalkaloids
- Protease inhibitors
- Vitamin C
- Fatty acids
- Amino acids
- Carbohydrates
- No negative compositional effects found in any of
the GM lines
5Emerging techniques transcriptome, metabolome
and transcriptome analysis to detect any
unintended effects
AGRONOMICS
PHENOTYPICS
GENOMICS
PROTEOMICS
METABOLOMICS
STATISTICS
Genome expression
Unintended effects?
Function
Metabolome expression
Proteome expression
Data integration
DIFFERENCES
COMPONENTS
PROTEINS
DNA/mRNAs
TISSUE
PLANT
6Safety and benefits
- We subject GM foods to more stringent safety
testing than non-GM foods! - GM foods hold potential benefit not just risk
- Better nutritional quality
- Reduced risk of poisoning from mycotoxins and
agrochemicals - Increased food production
7Food control is exercised by
- The Department of Agriculture
- The Department of Health
- (enforced by local authorities)
- The South African Bureau of Standards
8Food safety legislation
- Department of Agriculture
- Department of Health
- South African Bureau of Standards
- Agricultural Product Standards Act, 1990 (Act 119
of 1990) - Foodstuffs, Cosmetics and Disinfectants Act, 1972
(Act 54 of 1972) - Standards Act, 1993 (Act 29 of 1993)
9Should the consumer be told?
- General information on GM food should be provided
in a reasonable and balanced manner - Labelling of individual foods is a complex issue,
with no general agreement at international levels - The Codex alimentarius commission of the FAO and
WHO is attempting to achieve international
agreement on labelling, traceability etc
10Labelling of foods/GMOs
- Identification in terms of article 18 of the
Cartagena Protocol - Not only food - all live GMOs (LMOs).
- Only live GMOs
- Proposed labelling in terms of the FCD Act, 1972
- Food only
- Includes live GMOs plus processed (non-live) GMOs
11Labelling of GM foods in terms of the FCD Act,
1972
- Draft regulations published for comment in the
Government Gazette of 4 May 2001 - Final regulations submitted to DOH Legal Unit
during November 2002 - Dilemma
- - No consensus at the Joint FAO/WHO Codex
Alimentarius Commission - - Health obligation i.r.o. food control is
safety nutrition
12Contents of proposed regulations under the FCD
Act, 1972
- Must indicate presence of allergen (safety)
- Must indicate different composition, different
nutritional value, different method of storage,
preparation or cooking (nutrition) - May indicate enhanced characteristic (nutrition)
or reduced hypersensitivity (safety) subject to
validation/certification
13Contents of proposed regulations under the FCD
Act, 1972 (continued)
- Must indicate presence of genetic material from
humans or animals (religion, moral) - Must comply with general labelling regulations in
terms of the Act
14Contents of proposed regulations under the FCD
Act, 1972 (continued)
- Included in draft regulations but not in the
proposed final regulations - Conditions for claiming not genetically
modified - Prohibition on the claim GM free
- No Identity Preservation System in place
- Not a health issue
- No global consensus
15Mandatory labelling of all genetically modified
foods?
- Unless identity preservation systems are
introduced through the whole food chain, it can
be assumed that the majority of foods will have
some GM content - Identity preservation is expensive for
producers/industry and therefore for consumers
(8/tonne for maize?) - Analytical methods to test for the presence of GM
products are not completely reliable, lack
sensitivity and are expensive - Cost for Government, and therefore for consumers
- Right to know versus Right to eat
- Not a Health issue
16The way forward
- South Africa should adopt a pragmatic approach
- South Africa has potential to provide leadership
and direction in its approach to GM foods -