Articles in this document:

 

·          Food Companies Pledge Not to Use Clones

·          Cloned items in food supply?

 

 

Food Companies Pledge Not to Use Clones

 

By JANE ZHANG and JULIE JARGON

Wall Street Journal

September 4, 2008; Page B3

 

Twenty food companies have told a consumer group that they won't use milk or meat from cloned livestock.

 

The companies, including Smithfield Foods Inc. and Kraft Foods Inc., were responding to a survey conducted by the Center for Food Safety, a consumer group that opposes animal cloning.

 

Polls have shown most consumers are uncomfortable with the idea of eating products from cloned livestock, whether for health, ethical or environmental reasons. At the same time, products from the offspring of cloned animals are trickling into the food supply. Currently, the best way for consumers to avoid such foods is to eat organic food.

 

Basil Maglaris, a spokesman for Kraft, the U.S.'s largest food company by revenue and a major cheese producer, said the company has told suppliers it will accept only ingredients from conventional animals. "The surveys we've seen indicate that consumers aren't receptive to ingredients from cloned animals," he said. The pledge now only applies to cloned animals; the company says it will continue to monitor consumer acceptance of products from clones' offspring.

 

Other companies, including Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Tyson Foods Inc., have also banned the use of cloned animals in food products. Many haven't made a similar pledge to avoid using food from the conventionally bred offspring of clones, however, partly because no one is tracking the offspring.

 

A few have made such a pledge. The center said eight companies it surveyed said they wouldn't knowingly use food from the offspring of clones. These include Seattle-area organic retail cooperative PCC Natural Markets and Unilever's Vermont-based ice-cream maker Ben & Jerry's, which is pushing the government to create a national registry for clones and their offspring.

 

Andy Barker, social-mission coordinator at Ben & Jerry's, said the company isn't planning to advertise its clone-free status on its ice-cream cartons. It uses groups like the Center for Food Safety to publicize its status.

 

The International Dairy Foods Association, a trade group for dairy suppliers and manufacturers, said it isn't ready to embrace products made from cloned animals or their offspring. "Our concern is what impact it would have on the market," said spokeswoman Peggy Armstrong. "We don't want to see people not buy milk."

 

After the Food and Drug Administration ruled in January that products from cloned cattle, swine, goats and their offspring "are as safe to eat as the food we eat every day," U.S. regulators quietly withdrew their request for the food industry to voluntarily refrain from selling milk and meat from offspring of clones. A similar request for products made from the cloned animals themselves remains in place.

 

Clones -- at about $20,000 a copy -- are too expensive to be slaughtered for food themselves, but some ranchers said they have sold clones' offspring for food.

 

The Center for Food Safety began surveying the industry after the FDA denied its petition in January asking for mandatory labeling of clones and their offspring, as well as the regulation of animal cloning as a "new animal drug," which would require pre-market approval for safety before cloning can be used on animals. The FDA said the requests didn't meet the requirements for such actions.

 

The FDA "has denied the desire and will of the consumers and just about all food processors," said Joseph Mendelson, the center's legal director.

 

online.wsj.com

 

Cloned items in food supply?

 

4 Sep 2008, 0054 hrs IST,REUTERS

The Times of India

 

WASHINGTON: Food and milk from the offspring of cloned animals may have entered the US food supply, the US government said on Tuesday, but its impossible to know because there is no difference between cloned and conventional products.

 

The US Food and Drug Administration said in January meat and milk from cloned cattle, swine and goats and their offspring were as safe as products from traditional animals. Before then, farmers and ranchers had followed a voluntary moratorium on the sale of clones and their offspring.

 

While the FDA evaluated the safety of food from clones and their offspring, the agriculture department was in charge of managing the transition of these animals into the food supply.

 

"It is theoretically possible" offspring from clones are in the food supply, said Siobhan DeLancey, an FDA spokeswoman.

 

There are an estimated 600 cloned animals in the US. Proponents say that cloning is a way to create more disease-resistant animals that produce more milk and better meat.

 

The cloning industry and the FDA say cloned animals and their offspring are as safe as their traditional counterparts.

 

Critics contend not enough is known about the technology to ensure it is safe, and say the FDA needs to address concerns over animal cruelty and ethical issues. "It worries me that this technology is out of control in so many ways," said Charles Margulis, a spokesman with the Center for Environmental Health.

 

FDA and USDA said it is impossible to differentiate between cloned animals, their offspring and conventionally bred animals, making it difficult to know if offspring are in the food supply.

 

"But they would be a very limited number because of the very few number of clones that are out there and relatively few of those clones are at an age where they would be parenting," said Bruce Knight, USDA's undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs.

 

Major food companies including Tyson Foods Inc, the largest US meat company, and Smithfield Foods Inc have said that they would avoid using cloned animals because of safety concerns.

 

timesofindia.indiatimes.com