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Speak Up! Memphis

FDA Says Cloned Animals Safe

WASHINGTON (AP) - Meat and milk from cloned animals is as safe as that from their counterparts bred the old-fashioned way, the Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday, January 15, 2008, but sales still won't begin right away.

The decision removes the last big U.S. regulatory hurdle to marketing products from cloned livestock, and puts the FDA in concert with recent safety assessments from European food regulators and several other nations.

"Meat and milk from cattle, swine and goat clones are as safe as food we eat every day," said Dr. Stephen Sundloff, FDA's food safety chief.

But the government has asked animal cloning companies to continue a voluntary moratorium on sales for a little longer — not for safety reasons, but marketing ones.

USDA Undersecretary Bruce Knight called it a transition period for "allowing the marketplace to adjust." He wouldn't say how long the moratorium should continue.

"This is about market acceptance," Knight added, who said he would be calling a meeting of industry leaders to determine next steps.

Regardless, it still will be years before many foods from cloned animals reach store shelves, for economic reasons: At $10,000 to $20,000 per animal, they're a lot more expensive than ordinary cows, meaning producers likely will use clones' offspring for meat, not the clone itself.

And several large companies — including dairy giant Dean Foods Co. and Hormel Foods Corp. — have said they have no plans to sell milk or meat from cloned animals because of consumer anxiety about the technology.

But FDA won't require food makers to label if their products came from cloned animals, although companies could do so voluntarily if they knew the source. Last month, meat and dairy producers announced an industry system to track cloned livestock, with an electronic identification tag on each animal sold. Customers would sign a pledge to market the animal as a clone.

But that system is voluntary, and there is no way to tell if milk, for example, came from the daughter of a cloned cow.

"Both the animals and any food produced from those animals is indistinguishable from any other food source," Sundloff said. "There's no technological way of distinguishing a food that's come from an animal that had a clone in its ancestry. It's not possible."

The decision was long-expected, but controversial. Debate has been fierce within the Bush administration as to whether the FDA should move forward, largely because of trade concerns. Consumer advocates petitioned against the move, and Congress had passed legislation urging the FDA to study the issue more before moving ahead.

"The FDA has acted recklessly," said Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., who sponsored that legislation. "Just because something was created in a lab, doesn't mean we should have to eat it. If we discover a problem with cloned food after it is in our food supply and it's not labeled, the FDA won't be able to recall it like they did Vioxx — the food will already be tainted.

"If you ask what's for dinner, it means just about anything you can cook up in a laboratory," said Carol Tucker-Foreman of the Consumer Federation of America, who pledged to push for more food producers to shun clones.

The two main U.S. cloning companies, Viagen Inc. and Trans Ova Genetics, already have produced more than 600 cloned animals for U.S. breeders, the vast majority cattle, including copies of prize-winning cows and rodeo bulls.

"We certainly are pleased," said Trans Ova President David Faber, who noted that previous reports by the National Academy of Sciences and others have reached the same conclusion.

"Our farmer and rancher clients are pleased because it provided them with another reproductive tool," he added.

It was a day forecast since Scottish scientists announced in 1997 that they had successfully cloned Dolly the sheep. Ironically, sheep aren't on the list of FDA's approved cloned animals; the agency said there wasn't as much data about their safety as about cows, pigs and goats.

By its very definition, a successfully cloned animal should be no different from the original animal whose DNA was used to create it.

But the technology hasn't been perfected — and many attempts at livestock cloning still end in fatal birth defects or with deformed fetuses dying in the womb. Moreover, Dolly was euthanized in 2003, well short of her normal lifespan, because of a lung disease that raised questions about how cloned animals will age.

The FDA's report acknowledges that, "Currently, it is not possible to draw any conclusions regarding the longevity of livestock clones or possible long-term health consequences" for the animal.

But the agency concluded that cloned animals that are born healthy are no different than their non-cloned counterparts, and go on to reproduce normally as well.

"The FDA says, 'We assume all the unhealthy animals will be taken out of the food supply,'" said Joseph Mendelson of the Center for Food Safety, a consumer advocacy group that opposes FDA's ruling. "They're only looking at the small slice of cloned animals that appear to be healthy. ... It needs a lot further study."

It's your turn to Speak Up! Memphis.

Published Tuesday, January 15, 2008 1:37 PM by smyers

Comments

 

Bartlettman said:

Clone me a nice steak......
January 15, 2008 2:07 PM
 

AmandaMommyof1 said:

I'd try it. Sure it won't hurt...
January 15, 2008 4:29 PM
 

Bartlettman said:

Would not bother me either. Meat is meat.
January 15, 2008 4:38 PM
 

Memphis Granny said:

I do not want my grandchildren eating cloned meat or drinking cloned milk if the farmers are taht uncaring than maybe they need to quit farming and go into Politics like the rest of the people.
January 15, 2008 5:36 PM
 

LMagic said:

It's not proven safe. Dumbing down the gene pool via cloning is actually known to pose health risks.
January 16, 2008 12:16 AM
 

beatree319 said:

Hi, Beatree319

I don't think consumers should be subjected to meat & dairy products from cloned farm animals, without being made aware on the label. Just because FDA says it today, doesn't mean I, as a consumer, want to use it or give to my family. That should be my choice, not FDA. If the products are not going to be labeled, then my right to choose, is stripped away. We as consumers have the right to chose between Fat Free, Sugar Free, Caffeine Free why not Clone Free. Please don't sell me something I, as a consumer, don't want. It my money, I earned the right to spend it on what I want, not what FDA thinks is safe for me.

Thanks for allowing me to SPEAK OUT.
January 16, 2008 12:35 AM
 

Oh Yeah! said:

Certain people would try anything, even if their lives are on the line.
January 16, 2008 11:28 AM
 

DOVER said:

The FDA is not always thorough enough......
January 16, 2008 12:14 PM
 

single mother said:

I don't think its fair to the consumer to sell meat or milk products without a label.  We have a freedom of choice in this country and who are the FDA to take that choice away from us.  There are already several chemicals and steroids being put in and on our food, and cloned meat and milk are the last things we should have to worry about.  There are several diseases and illnesses in this would alone without the harmful affects of cloned meat and milk to add to them.  There are several things that have been deemed safe for us and has turned out not so.  Whose to say what could develop later from these cloned products.  There are some that will buy it but as for the rest of us, please don't force this thing on us.  
January 16, 2008 12:50 PM
 

amazed said:

is there a shortage of regular cows? - why are we even having this conversation ?
January 16, 2008 2:05 PM
 

Jackie O said:

Cloned animals or any thing cloned for that matter are man made objects, that come from nowhere.  These living beings have no soul.. I think the whole idea of cloning is crazy.  God is the only giver & taker of life.  they are going to create things that they will have no control over without a god given soul I see us living amongst things that will destroy human kind as we know it.
January 16, 2008 4:29 PM
 

MARS said:

JACKIE - 0, as a christian myself, VERY GOOD POINT, AMEN TO THAT COMMENT, AMEN,
January 16, 2008 4:41 PM
 

Susan said:

The only things that I want man to have touched or made is my clothes other than that I want my food the old fashioned way from a real cow, pig, or chicken.
January 16, 2008 5:53 PM
 

malissa d said:

I came from Detroit Mi to Memphis 2 years ago, I worked for Detroit Public Schools
for 18 yrs, and I've seen so much violence and death on School Campus, and it affected me so much  I left my job,  Parents wasn't involved, and the teachers didn't
care..  If  the School Adminstration, an Parents don't get controll now, the violence
will spread, every week at different schools, please don't be fooled. that's wasn't the only student in school that day with a gun. If a random  weapon sweep is done by MPD, in the high schools and middle schools, you'll see what I mean....
                  malissa d.
                 
February 11, 2008 6:57 PM
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