US regulators on Friday approved what would be the first commercialized biotech apple, rejecting efforts by the organic industry and other GMO critics to block the new fruit.
The US Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service approved two genetically engineered apple varieties designed to resist browning that have been developed by Canadian company Okanagan Specialty Fruits Inc.
Okanagan plans to market the apples as Arctic Granny and Arctic Golden, and says the apples are identical to their conventional counterparts except the flesh of the fruit retains a fresh appearance even after it is sliced or bruised.
Okanagan President Neal Carter called the USDA approval “a monumental occasion.”
“It is the biggest milestone yet for us and we can’t wait until they’re available for consumers,” he said in a statement.
Carter said Arctic apples would first be available late next year in small quantities and that it would take many years before the apples are widely distributed.
The new Okanagan apples have drawn broad opposition. The Organic Consumers Association (OCA), which petitioned the USDA to deny approval, says the genetic changes that prevent browning could be harmful to human health and that pesticide levels on the apples could be excessive.
The OCA would be pressuring food companies and retail outlets not to make use of the apples, OCA Director Ronnie Cummins said.
“This whole thing is just another big experiment on humans for no good reason,” he said.
USDA said it had determined the apples were “unlikely to pose a plant pest risk to agriculture” and they are “not likely to have a significant impact on the human environment.”
The law only allows the agency’s decision to be based on its analysis of the plant pest risk to agriculture or other plants in the US.
The Food and Drug Administration, which has no mandatory review process for genetically engineered foods, is looking at the new apples through a voluntary consultation with Okanagan.
Several science, environmental and consumer groups said they worry the genetic changes could have unintended consequences on insects, animals and humans.
“We think there are some possible risks that were not adequately considered,” said Doug Gurian-Sherman, a plant pathologist and senior scientist with the Center for Food Safety non-profit group.
Okanagan said in a statement that its apples have undergone “rigorous review” and are “likely the most tested apples on the planet.”
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