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spotlight again on cloned animals
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a review of cloning is underway at the european food safety authority (efsa) following a request from the european commission for further advice on the implications of the technology for food safety, animal health and welfare and the environment. efsa has initiated a public consultation period to collate data to support the review, and the agency said that it aims to build on its july 2008 recommendations regarding clones. the commission has asked efsa to further investigate the causes of disease and mortality in clones during the gestation period and at early stages of life, and also requested that the agency consider the extent to which current knowledge on the cloning of cattle and pigs can be applied to sheep, goats and chicken. according to the agency, the call for data is aimed at all parties holding relevant information which has become available since january 2008, such as new publications or scientific information not yet published. efsa said its scientific committee will deliver its advice by june 2009. earlier opinion last july, the agency said that meat and dairy products from cloned pigs and cattle are probably safe for human consumption. the risk assessor said that it looked into existing data on the safety of cloned pigs and cattle; however, it warned that the data available was 'limited'. professor john collins, chair of efsa's biohaz panel, one of ten scientific panels that make up the efsa’s scientific committee, said the premise that healthy meat comes from healthy animals informed the work of the committee. he said that based on the knowledge available there was no evidence to indicate that cloned meat and dairy goods were any different from conventional products. however, collins added that the panel strongly recommended that the health and welfare of clones be monitored throughout both their production and natural life span to allow for revision of the efsa opinion in the light of any future developments or new data. international perspective in january, an advisory committee for japan's food safety regulator said that food made from cloned animals is safe to eat. and cloned animals and their offspring received a positive response on their safety from the us food and drug administration (fda) in january 2008, with the regulator approving the sale of food from such animals. however, the us department of agriculture (usda) was more cautious saying food from cloned animals should not be sold until further consultations took place. industry view philip hambling, food policy manager with the british meat processing association (bmpa), told foodproductiondaily.com previously that it was too early to determine exactly what the benefits of animal cloning technology for the meat industry were. he said that as the meat sector was consumer driven and with the general public so far displaying strong resistance to such products, more debate around the ethical and social implications of cloning is required. consumer resistance to food from clones is bound to pose a problem, given the level of high concern surrounding attempts to introduce genetically-modified foods in europe. and a survey last year by the uk food standards agency (fsa) showed that consumers there struggled to find any tangible consumer benefits from cloned animals being introduced into the food chain. the fsa said the respondents expressed concern that the main motive would be " financial, for biotech companies, livestock breeders, farmers or food retailers."
Source :Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch
Date :
12
March
2009
Category :
Impression And Package Service
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there are no human health concerns over current dietary exposure to a range of fluorinated chemicals, such as pfos and pfoa, the uk food standards agency (fsa) has said the food safety watchdog came to its conclusion after testing a range of retail foods for fluorinated substances - including perfluorooctane sulphonate (pfos) and perfluorooctanoic acid (pfoa).
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an advisory committee for japan's food safety regulator has said that food made from cloned animals is safe to eat. in april last year, the food safety commission was asked to deliberate on the matter by japan’s ministry of health. “foods derived from cloned cows and swine, and from the offspring of clones, are as safe as food from conventionally bred animals,” said the working group in its report published today.
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the uk government has set in motion a review of food policy and strategies with the publication of an analytical study on current and emerging food trends. among the analysis, the report found that the british diet has shifted considerably in recent history. while the origin of food is becoming a more important factor, people have been eating more pre-prepared foods in the last ten years.
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warranted or not, it comes as no surprise to learn that there is growing concern among uk consumers over food safety. according to new research from mintel, 41 per cent of adults were concerned about the safety of food in 1997, while in 2002 this figure has risen to 44 per cent of consumers. the report revealed that there is a considerable difference in attitude between men and women with over half of women (51 per cent) worried about food safety, compared to just 36 per cent of men.
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environmental campaigners urged the uk food standards agency (fsa) to improve its emergency system at yesterday's review meeting on the unauthorised gm rice incident. the meeting re-evaluated the fsa's handling of the discovery of the illegal ll rice 601, unapproved for human consumption, in american long grain rice supplies for export in august 2006. friends of the earth gm campaigner clare oxborrow said: "the incident revealed a vulnerability with the agency's lack of knowledge on the structure of the market and where the major food products went to.
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the uk food standards agency (fsa) is to propose a strategy this week for the control of mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (map) in milk. map is a bacterium that is known to cause a chronic gastrointestinal infection called johne\'s disease in cattle and other ruminants. it is also implicated in crohn\'s disease in humans, a chronic bowel inflammation condition. a study commissioned by the fsa found that map was present in around 2 per cent of pasteurised milk.
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