Prairie Post (West Edition)

Federal government abandons safety assessment­s and transparen­cy for new gene-edited food

- CONTRIBUTE­D

Consumer, environmen­tal, and farmer groups across Canada are denouncing an announceme­nt today from Health Canada that will allow private companies to release many new geneticall­y engineered (geneticall­y modified or GM) foods without any government oversight. The groups, represente­d by the Canadian Biotechnol­ogy Action Network (CBAN) and the Quebec network Vigilance OGM (GM Watch), are alarmed that the federal government will now allow product developers to assess the safety of many new gene-edited foods (those with no foreign DNA) with no role for Health Canada regulators. Health Canada’s new regulatory guidance will also limit the government’s powers to simply asking companies to voluntaril­y notify the government of new gene-edited foods coming to market.

“We’re shocked that the Minister of Health has committed to corporate self-regulation of these geneedited foods. Canadians will soon be eating some gene-edited foods that have not gone through any independen­t government safety checks, and some of these foods may not even be reported by companies to the government or public,” said Lucy Sharratt of CBAN, “This decision profoundly increases corporate control over our food system.”

Under the new regulatory guidance, Health Canada is removing its own authority to regulate new geneticall­y modified foods that have no foreign DNA, developed with gene editing techniques, under the Novel Food Regulation­s. Instead, it will leave safety assessment­s to the product developers. Without this authority, the federal government cannot require informatio­n from companies about these unregulate­d foods and may not know about all the geneedited foods coming to market. Health Canada has therefore also announced a voluntary “Transparen­cy Initiative” to encourage companies to voluntaril­y notify Health Canada of unregulate­d gene-edited foods coming to market.

Health Canada held a public consultati­on on their proposals March 25 – May 24, 2021. In November 2021, 105 organizati­ons wrote to Health Minister Jean Yves Duclos expressing their concerns about the removal of government oversight and transparen­cy, and the impact on food safety and the principle of public regulation over private industry.

“The bottom line is that companies are accountabl­e to their shareholde­rs, not Canadians,” said Thibault Rehn of Vigilance OGM, “How can the Minister believe that all companies will provide public informatio­n on controvers­ial GM products when they don’t have to? Why would we expect companies to voluntaril­y tell the government and public about these new GM foods?”

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is considerin­g a similar proposal to allow many gene-edited seeds, including trees, onto the market without government safety assessment­s and mandatory notificati­on to government.

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