Print

Transferring the laboratory to the wild

Third World Network has published a new Biosafety Briefing, “Transferring the laboratory to the wild: An emerging era of environmental genetic engineering”.

It spotlights new genetic engineering techniques such as genome editing and new delivery techniques that have facilitated an emerging trend to genetically engineer organisms in the wild. This moves the engineering process to agroecosystems and beyond, essentially converting the environment into the laboratory.

The briefing presents examples of research and applications, including the development of gene drive organisms (GDOs), horizontal environmental genetic alteration agents (HEGAAs) that deliver viruses carrying genome editing machinery directly to crop fields, the delivery of genome editing machinery to crops via pollen-mediated transfer, the application of RNA interference products directly to crops and farmed animals, and developments in "penetration" techniques to deliver genetic engineering tools to organisms.

These techniques are broadening the scale and range of potentially exposed target and non-target organisms. However, there is scientific evidence that genome editing and other emerging genetic engineering technologies have a variety of unintended effects. Careful consideration by governments and funders, and stringent regulations, are necessary to prevent irreversible risks to open environments.

The Briefing is available at: https://biosafety-info.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Biosafety-briefing_From-lab-to-wild.pdf