Your Quarter-Pounder
Just Might Have Come From a Cloned Cow (Indirectly)
DISCOVER - Blogs / 80beats
September 4, 2008
Meat and milk from the offspring of cloned animals may
already be part of the U.S.
food supply, the Food and Drug Administration announced this week. While the
cloning process is too expensive (about $20,000 per animal) to justify creating
clones that will be turned into hamburgers, some ranchers have cloned animals
with desirable traits, which they then breed the old-fashioned way to create
offspring. Officials 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 [Reuters].
The use of cloned livestock–particularly cows, swine, and
sheep–has been fiercely debated in the United
States and Europe. In
January, the FDA declared that cloned animals and their offspring were as safe
to eat as conventionally bred animals; regulators still ask that food companies
follow a voluntary moratorium on using cloned animals for food production, but
no such moratorium exists for the clones’ natural offspring. Those offspring
may have made it into the food supply, a U.S. Agriculture Department spokesman
said, 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” [Reuters].
European regulators have taken a much dimmer view of the
cloning industry, and yesterday the European Parliament proposed an official
ban on using clones or their offspring for food production. Several expert groups,
including the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the European Group on
Ethics in Science and New Technologies, outlined problems such as the animals’
well-being and the higher mortality rate of cloned animals. They also stressed
that cloning coould considerably reduce the gene pool
diversity and increase the risk of whole herds being hit by an illness they are
all particularly susceptible to [AFP].
Here in the United
States, 20 food companies responded to the
FDA’s latest announcement by promising not to use cloned livestock, citing
consumer polls that showed consumers have health, ethical, and environmental
concerns regarding cloned meat. 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 Wall Street Journal]. However, Kraft’s current
pledge only applies to the clones themselves, not to their offspring.
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