Rome/Geneva, 8 March 2002 -- A Task
Force of the Codex Alimentarius Commission has reached agreement
on a final draft of "Principles for the risk analysis
of foods derived from biotechnology," the UN Food and
Agriculture Organzation (FAO) and the World Health Organization
(WHO) announced today.
A round of applause by the 226
participants greeted the Wednesday agreement reached by the
Codex Intergovernmental Task Force on Foods Derived from
Biotechnology on Wednesday in Yokohama, Japan.
The Principles will provide a framework for evaluating
the safety and nutritional aspects of Genetically Modified (GM)
foods. They define the need for a pre-market safety assessment
of all such foods on a case-by-case basis. According to the UN
agencies, the assessment should look into both intended and
unintended effects, identifying new or altered hazards and
identifying changes, relevant to human health, especially in
regard to key nutrients and potential allergenic components.
The Principles would require authorities to
consider the uncertainties identified in the safety assessment
and implement appropriate measures to manage these
uncertainties. One management option described in the
Principles is post-market monitoring. The Principles also
provide guidance related to analytical methods and other tools
to be used in risk management. In this area, the two agencies
say that the Task Force "reached a very important new
agreement concerning the tracing of GM products for the purpose
of facilitating withdrawal from the market when a risk to human
health has been identified."
The
task force also adopted detailed requirements for assessing the
safety of GM plants including tests for allergenicity
The agreement could also mark a break-through in
international negotiations concerning the use of tracing systems
in relation to food in international trade, the international
agencies say.
The Principles also say that
efforts should be made to improve the capability of regulatory
authorities particularly in developing countries, to assess and
manage the safety of GM foods.
The Task
Force, which has been hosted by Japan since 2000, will go on
developing guidelines for risk assessment of GM foods
originating from microorganisms. It will continue its efforts
until March 2003. The final work of the Task Force will be
submitted to the FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission, at its
next meeting in July 2003 in Rome, Italy, for adoption.
The Codex Alimentarius, or the food code,
has become the seminal global reference point for consumers,
food producers and processors, national food control agencies
and the international food trade. The code has had an impact on
the thinking of food producers and processors as well as on the
awareness of the end users - the consumers. Its influence
extends to every continent, and its contribution to the
protection of public health and fair practices in the food trade
is immeasurable.