GE Animal Appeal Is Against the National Interest
GE Animal Legal Appeal Is Against the National
Interest
GE Animal Legal Appeal Is Against the National Interest
It is a travesty that public money will be used to fund the appeal against the High Court ruling which invalidated four applications for indefinite, nation-wide commercialisation of GE animals.
“GE Free NZ believes that Justice Clifford wrote a robust and measured decision” said Claire Bleakley president of GE Free NZ in food and environment “The HSNO Act Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act (HSNO) Act guidelines are very specific as to what is to be in an application and we believe that the precedent setting High Court decision will be upheld.”
The public have made it clear that extreme science of genetic engineering of animals, with the associated abuse and deformities, is simply unacceptable in a modern democratic society with an economy reliant on food exports and our clean-green natural image.
Recent surveys show some 70% of New Zealanders are strongly against the GE animals being proposed by AgResearch in partnership with its overseas biotechnology investors.
Just last week the NZ Herald (Business: B1, 25 June) reported MAF have released a discussion paper signalling the huge opportunity for New Zealand as a world leader in "high-quality sustainably produced meat, rewarding farmers for meeting consumer expectations, in both traditional and new markets".
"The vision outlined in the GE animal applications is simply madness", says Jon Carapiet from GE Free NZ in food and environment. "An approval of the enormous range of things being sought, including the right to import GE embryos from other countries, instigate GE animal production anywhere, anytime, and even using novel GE techniques yet to be invented, is tantamount to economic suicide for Brand New Zealand".
The notice of appeal highlights the core of the argument that has pitched independent scientists, farmers and the public against the vested interests of biotechnology entrepreneurs who are keen to undermine and exploit New Zealand sovereign law, but unwilling to find a middle path of ethical applications of biotechnology such as gene-marker assisted breeding (MAB) and use of recombinant vat fermentation technology in full laboratory containment.
The sly attempt by the applicants to undermine the HSNO*Act and establish a National Protocol that might benefit a handful of biotechnology investors, is an unprecedented betrayal of statutory protections.
The prospect of using genetically engineered food animals as 'bio-reactors' is a direct attack on the recommendations of the Royal Commission on GM, and would have been the subject of a comprehensive audit by the BioEthics Council had it not just been abolished by the National-led government.
In response to specific points in the notice of appeal, GE Free NZ in food and environment offers the following observations on:
5a &5b:
'The Authorities [ERMA] expert opinion is
needed in all but the most obvious cases of… outrageous or
flagrant failure to comply with statutory information
requirements.
Applying to conduct commercial
ventures of an undetermined nature including future
techniques of GE yet to be invented in undisclosed locations
anywhere in the country, we believe is a failure to comply
with statutory requirements.
5c: 'That the High
Court had no authority to conclude the applications
contained insufficient information for risk
assessment'
ERMA agency staff recognised in their
prior assessment of these applications that they lacked
certain information and asked for it to be provided under
HSNO Act s:53 which was not forth coming.
5e:
‘…It is not for AgResearch or ERMA to prove that risk
cannot be assessed’.
It is impossible to believe
ERMA had the capacity to assess the complex risks arising
from the unspecified myriad of recombinant variations, over
an indefinite period of; intended and accidental genetic
recombination’s, animal behaviour and spread of novel
disease, soil water and climate conditions throughout New
Zealand, local iwi and community values, overseas markets,
animal abuse including deliberate creation of deformities.
ERMA can undertake cost-benefits of an undisclosed unlimited
set o f GMO combinations being applied for using an
authentic or credible risk model . Experts can only
assess risk when they know what it is they are
assessing
6I: “…that the Authority is not
dependent on public input in relation to Applicants
claims”.
It is required that sufficient information
for public submissions is provided. No information becomes
meaningless. Even ERMA recognised that public input was a
valuable component of consultation.. Without it, it takes
the Authority into the realm of fascism aimed at riding
roughshod over community involvement and enforces acceptance
of unethical ventures and unsound science.
7 :
‘...HSNO so provide in effect for a 'National Protocol'
The National Protocol is upheld through the HSNO Act
and provides clear guidelines as to what is required by law.
In the absence of a clear Ethical Biotechnology Strategy for
New Zealand the deceitful attempt to pass such a protocol is
unconscionable and would be tantamount to economic
sabotage
ENDS