OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - California regulators declined Thursday to
become the first state to formally prohibit fish farmers from
introducing genetically engineered fish into public waterways,
insisting a "de facto ban" already exists.
Officials with the state Department of Fish and Game said they have
not received any applications from "aquaculturists" to use the
contentious biotechnology to grow fatter fish faster - nor would they
grant any permits for some time.
A consortium of environmental activists and commercial fisheries,
fearful of what the engineered creatures could do if released into
the natural habitat, had asked the Fish and Game Commission for a
two-year ban. The moratorium is needed to allow enough time to
research the consequences engineered fish will have on the
environment, they argued at a commission meeting in Oakland.
An influential Food and Drug Administration ( news - web sites)
report recently released by top scientists concluded engineered fish
that escape into the wild pose a significant risk to natural species,
either through cross breeding or depleting food supplies.
The FDA is currently considering Waltham, Mass.-based Aqua Bounty
Farms Inc.'s application to sell engineered Atlantic salmon that grow
to market size twice as fast as unmodified salmon. An FDA decision on
the application isn't expected for more than two years as the company
still needs to conduct environmental safety tests.
Though Aqua Bounty doesn't intend to raise any of its modified salmon
in California, company executive Joseph McGonigle attended the
meeting Thursday to voice his opposition to the ban.
McGonigle said Aqua Bounty's salmon will ultimately be regulated by
several federal and state agencies before it reaches market.
Department Deputy Director Sonke Mastrup said the agency has those
same environmental concerns and is reviewing its current regulations
to see if they need updating. Currently, the regulations don't
specifically mention genetically engineered fish, which are spliced
with genes from other fish species.
Still, Mastrup told the commission a moratorium was superfluous.
"We are not going to consider any application until this issue is
resolved," he said.
The zebrafish is the only genetically engineered fish is allowed to
be raised in California, and it is grown exclusively for research
purposes. The proposed moratorium would have excluded research labs
such as one at the University of California, San Francisco from any
ban.
The commission agreed to forgo a moratorium Thursday and instead
ordered the department to report back to it in October about how long
a review of its regulations would take.
At least one commissioner, though, appeared to support a ban.
"There is a clear and present danger of transgenic fish impacting our
environment," said Robert Hattoy, citing the FDA's report. Hattoy,
who was sworn in as a commissioner Thursday, agreed to wait until the
October meeting to reconsider the ban.
Meanwhile, a bill banning transgenic fish from California waterways
for two years passed the Senate and was pending before the California
Assembly, which could vote on the bill anytime before it recesses
this weekend. The bill will die if the assembly fails to vote on it
by the recess.
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