Six premier Indian science academies, given the task of evaluating Bt brinjal by Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, have declared it safe, but their findings also say all genetically modified (GM) items pose a risk if the science behind them is flawed. The academies, as part of their mandate, have made key recommendations, including allowing the use of GM crops to meet growing food demands.
However, they said, India’s food security is “too critical an area” to be left entirely to the private sector. Therefore, public sector organisations should be the main facilitators of GM technologies.
The launch of Bt brinjal, India’s first GM food crop, was aborted in February after a safety debate broke out. While putting a moratorium on the genetically-engineered eggplant, the world’s first, Ramesh had said a decision to release it would have to be “responsible to both science and society”.
Ramesh had then appointed the academies to scrutinise Bt brinjal and give a rigorous opinion on GM crops.
K. Kasturirangan, Planning Commission member heading farm research, was asked to steer the project involving Bangalore-based Indian Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Medical Sciences, Indian National Academy of Engineering, Indian National Science Academy and National Academy of Agricultural Sciences, all New Delhi-based, and Allahabad-based National Academy of Sciences.
In GM crops, the genetic material (DNA) is altered to improve its qualities. Bt Brinjal, for instance, has been inserted with a bacterial protein so that it resists pests.
The academies, which have submitted their findings to the government, found no evidence that the protein used in creating Bt brinjal, Cry1Ac, is unsafe. “The same Bt protein present in another food crop has been consumed elsewhere in the world with no evidence of any scientifically established negative effect,” the report, reviewed by HT, states.
Some people can still be allergic to Bt brinjal, the findings say, just as some people develop allergies to common foods such as milk or nuts. So, no food can be declared 100 per cent safe for all from this viewpoint.
Read the whole story: Hindustan Times
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Report on Bt brinjal’s commercial use plagiarized
A charge of plagiarism has been leveled by an anti GM crop advocacy group against a high profile report from the six leading science academ...
-
T he first of the genetically modified seed varieties developed in India will make it to the market soon as the government has registered tw...
-
Tomatoes could stay fresh for an extra month thanks to a genetic breakthrough, Photo via Mail Online Researchers at National Institute of Pl...
-
Photo credit: Gene Campaign The genetically modified Bt Brinjal has been developed in compliance with global norms and experts evaluating it...
No comments:
Post a Comment