Will New Zealand burn while ERMA fiddles?
Will New Zealand burn while ERMA fiddles?
GE Free NZ in Food and Environment understands that officials at the Environmental Risk Management Authority (ERMA) have been going "under the radar" and rubber-stamping amendments to regulatory approvals at the GM facilities of both AgResearch and Plant and Food.
These fiddles
are being made under section 67A of the Hazardous Substances
and New Organism Act (HSNO), away from public scrutiny, and
have resulted in a loss of control over who is responsible
for conducting GM experiments.
"It appears that
many of the "development" approvals are so generic that ERMA
do not even know what they are approving, or who is in
control. In some instances they have then allowed additional
amendments which further dilute any safety measures that the
public have been lulled into believing have been put in
place," said Claire Bleakley, President of GE Free NZ in
food and environment.
These under-the-radar regulatory changes have been highlighted following the most recent containment-breach of GM plants (1) which is now being investigated by Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF).
The contamination discovery has been further
complicated by the GM construct being found to have no match
for ERMA approved research; calling into question whether
this event is contamination from a "third party".
"The public have been promised strict containment as the
basis for research but has been seriously let down by ERMA,
the official GM regulator. ERMA have failed in their
responsibility, and have approved generic applications that
contain a vast library of elements without knowing the exact
constructs," said Claire Bleakley.
"It is not good enough to try and blame third parties when ERMA has allowed changes to regulatory controls under HSNO 67A amendments which have effectively given GM laboratories carte blanche to mix and match any genetic element to produce anything, anytime."
"It appears that ERMA has been allowing
statutory boundaries to be stretched to breaking point and
ignoring outside expertise on agronomic performance. This
breach has revealed ERMA decisions are not looking after New
Zealand's interests but endangering New Zealand's
agriculture and environmental security," said Ms Bleakley.
"ERMA and MAF must close all facilities conducting GM research and follow the statutory guidelines. These require clear identification and expression of each individual construct to be provided if laboratory work is to continue, rather than the carte blanche approval of any genetic engineering event."
ENDS