http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_1492000/1492939.stm
Wednesday, 15 August,
2001, 16:47 GMT 17:47 UK

Genetically-modified
soya: Greenpeace says this one is untested and unapproved (Image: Greenpeace)
By BBC
News Online's environment correspondent Alex Kirby
Greenpeace is asking scientists worldwide to
help identify a fragment of DNA found in genetically-modified (GM) soya.
The presence of the fragment, in Monsanto's
Roundup Ready soya, was detected by Belgian scientists.
Greenpeace is urging the UK government to
order sales of the soya to be suspended.
But Monsanto says "the information
provided by Greenpeace has not changed the competent authorities' conclusions
of their original risk assessment".
The Belgian team's discovery, made some
months ago and reported now in the European Journal of Food Research
Technology, refers to "a DNA segment of 534 bp DNA for which no sequence
homology could be detected".
Dr Doug Parr, Greenpeace-UK's chief
scientific adviser, said: "No-one knows what this extra gene sequence is,
what it will produce in the soyabean, and what its effects will be.
Technology 'imprecise'
"If Monsanto did not even get this most
basic information right, what should we then think about the validity of all
their safety tests and experiments, which are based upon these data?
"Despite Monsanto's optimistic
reassurances, this research presents further evidence that genetic modification
is an imprecise technology.
"Given the history of omission and
negligence associated with it, regulators should seriously reconsider how they
approach approvals of GM plants."

Lindsay Keenan, of Greenpeace International, said: "From a legal point of
view, the only adequate reaction regulatory bodies could have is to suspend the
GM approval and re-evaluate its environmental and health impact."
Greenpeace says Monsanto's soya represents
more than 50% of all GM crops globally.
It is grown only in the US, Argentina and
Canada, but sold worldwide and used in processed foods like chocolate,
baby-food, bread, pizzas, ice-cream, and as animal feed.
Monsanto says it has previously shown that
"any deletion, rearrangement or modification of the DNA referred to by
Greenpeace occurred at the time of the original insertion event".
Not new
Tony Combes of Monsanto told BBC News
Online: "It would have been a constituent of the Roundup Ready soyabeans
used in all the safety assessment studies."
"So this clearer data is not new and
has in fact been conveyed to all European Union competent authorities
"There is no discrepancy. The sequence
information provided originally has not changed; it's just that now we know
more detail about it."
Mr Combes said studies supported the
conclusion that there were no unexpected effects from the insertion or
transformation process, and that Roundup Ready soya was comparable to
conventional beans except for the one trait which gave it its name.

The Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment, which advises the UK
government, said last January it was satisfied with Monsanto's revised risk
assessment submitted in response to the Belgian data.
Monsanto's revised assessment, the committee
concluded, "did not alter the conclusions of the original assessment . . .
the presence of the DNA does not appear to have any deleterious effects with
respect to environmental safety".
A spokesman for the Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) told BBC News Online the Belgian
data "are not new and change nothing".
'Technical' concerns
The Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and
Processes, which reports to the Food Standards Agency, asked Monsanto in
January for data showing the DNA fragment was "silent" and did not
result in the production of a novel protein.
Tony Combes told BBC News Online:
"We're doing the experiments to provide the data the committee wants, and
they should be complete very soon.
"But its concerns are nothing to do
with safety. They're all technical."
Related to this story:
Eight
arrests at GM crop protest (14 Jul 01 | Wales) GM
crop trial abandoned (22 May 01 | Sci/Tech) GM
trial 'no threat to organic centre' (06 May 01 | Sci/Tech)
Internet links: Monsanto UK | Defra | Greenpeace
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