Dear all,
The Advisory Committee on Genetic Modification is holding a public meeting on the use of genetically modified organisms in labs and factories on 30th October 2001 at 1.00pm Health and Safety Executive, Rose Court, 2 Southwark Bridge, London SE1 9HS. For tickets and details contact: John Richardson Tel: 020 7717 6278; Fax 020 7717 6199; e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. The meeting will discuss experimental use of GMOs including microroganisms, animals and plants. I have been told that tickets 'are going very quickly, but as yet we have had no requests for tickets from Greenpeace or other similar groups.' So people need to get tickets ASAP. I hope you will be able to attend as contained use raises important safety issues in its own right and is also a precursor to releases. Please circulate this invitation widely. Thanks
Sue Mayer
GeneWatch UK The Mill House Manchester Road Tideswell Buxton Derbyshire SK17 8LN Ph: 01298 871898 Fax: 01298 872531
Visit the GeneWatch UK web site at: www.genewatch.org
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LEAKS FROM THE LAB - NEW GMO CONTAINED USE REGULATIONS
here's some GeneWatch stuff on micro-organisms
http://members.tripod.com/~ngin/42.htm
This largely unnoticed issue was highlighted last year by Gene Watch UKÃs excellent report ëLeaking from the labà which revealed that GM micro-organisms, frequently containing antibiotic resistance genes, are being released in waste from factories and laboratories into rivers and the atmosphere unmonitored by any Government agency. The GeneWatch report also found that although the waste is treated, not all the GMMs are killed and one company alone, Zeneca, has said it expected to release millions of living GMMs per litre of waste into the ëwater drainage/sewage systemÃ. GeneWatch also found that companies registered as using GMMs on a large scale are not required to supply details of what they are producing or releasing into the environment.
ïDownload GeneWatch Report as a pdf:
http://www.genewatch.org/Publications/reports.htm
ïView GeneWatch Report Summary and Recommendations:
http://www.genewatch.org/Publications/Reports/CUseSumm.htm
ïDetails of registered large-scale GMM users in the UK:
http://www.genewatch.org/Fact%20Files/gmmusers.htm
More on the GeneWatch report findings in a press release below.
http://www.genewatch.org/Press%20Releases/pr08.htm
PRESS RELEASE: Monday 28th June 1999 [shortened]
GM MICRO-ORGANISMS RELEASED INTO THE ENVIRONMENT EVERY DAY ACROSS THE UK, SAYS NEW GENEWATCH UK REPORT
In a new report, GeneWatch UK reveals that GM micro-organisms (GMMs), which are being used throughout the UK for research and to make drugs, are being released in waste from factories and laboratories into rivers and the atmosphere, unmonitored by any Government agency. The effects these GMMs are having on the environment are unknown and the Environment Agency, which is responsible for water and air quality, has no remit to control or monitor discharges (1). The GeneWatch report found that, according to the Health and Safety ExecutiveÃs (HSEÃs) public register, GM bacteria, viruses, yeasts and fungi are used at 471 sites for research and industrial purposes - 34 of which use GMMs on a large scale (2). Although the waste from these sites is treated, not all the GMMs are killed (3) and one company, Zeneca, has said it expected to release millions of living GMMs per litre of waste into the ëwater drainage/sewage systemà (4).
"The HSE’s public register only records the use of GMMs since 1992. Once registered, most companies and scientists do not have to provide any details of their activities if they decide they are of low risk - so no-one knows exactly what is going on," said Dr Sue Mayer, Director of GeneWatch UK and one of the reportÃs authors. "The effects of this genetic pollution are unknown and once again with a GM issue we are having to produce our own research to force the Government to acknowledge the problem and take appropriate action." The 54-page report, ëLeaking from the LabÃ, is the result of 6 months of research. It lists the companies registered as using GMMs on a large scale, the sorts of products and research for which they are using GMMs, and examines the possible dangers of allowing live GMMs to be released into the environment. The report shows that although the spotlight has fallen on GM foods and crops, releases of GMMs are taking place, unmonitored and unpoliced, and that GMMs in waste are falling through an enormous loophole in current regulations. "Using GM organisms in this way is known as ëcontained useà but this safe-sounding phrase belies the reality - that GM pollution of our air and rivers is being allowed without any knowledge of the harm that could arise," said Dr Mayer.
GeneWatch UK is seeking an urgent meeting with the Environment Minister, Michael Meacher MP, to discuss the findings of the research and the implications for BritainÃs rivers and air quality. Their key demands are:
- GMMs in waste must be brought into line with other forms of pollution control.
- Responsibility for GMM waste must be moved to the Environment Agency.
- Safety systems must be established along with effective monitoring and policing strategies.
The report’s key findings are:
ïLack of information
ïNo comprehensive information on the use of GMMs is held by any authority. Companies registered as using GMMs on a large scale would not supply details of what they were producing or releasing into the environment.
The possible impacts
Responsibility for assessing the potential risks of GMMs rests largely with the users themselves, who have a vested interest in classifying them as 'low risk'.
GMMs frequently contain antibiotic resistance genes.
A GMM's foreign DNA can be passed to other organisms and vice versa.
Even GMMs categorised as 'low-risk' can survive for days or weeks in the environment.
Transfer of genes could result in organisms becoming more infectious and could increase the likelihood of drug resistant diseases or disturb natural ecosystems.
Since 1992, the HSE has taken action against seven universities or institutes for failure to observe safety procedures. The HSE has only the equivalent of one person allocated to inspecting nearly 500 sites using GMMs.
ends
For more information, please contact GeneWatch UK on:
Tel: + 44 (0)1298 871898
Fax: + 44 (0)1298 872531
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Notes to Editors:
1. In a letter to GeneWatch UK dated 14th December 1998, Dr Jan Pentreath - Chief Scientist and Director of Environmental Strategy of the Environment Agency - said that: "For discharges to waterÖthere is no requirement to inform us if GM material (whether deactivated or not) is present."
2. Large scale means that the GMMs are grown in culture volumes of 10 litres or more. This could reach 10,000 litres and contain 1014 to 1016 organisms. (106 is one million organisms.)
3. At a consultation meeting on the regulations of GMMs at Bootle, Merseyside on 1st June 1999, HSE official Dr Paul Logan confirmed that the requirement to inactivate waste meant that the majority, but not all, GMMs would be killed before disposal in waste.
4. Following inactivation of waste, Zeneca BioProducts at Billingham, said in their 1993 notification of a large scale use of a GMM, that it expected to be discharging millions of living GMMs per litre to the "Terrestrial, research and production site" and "Water drainage/sewage system".