×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

UK watchdog adviser-Cloned cattle meat likely safe

by (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2010. Click For Restrictions. http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 26 November 2010 14:28 GMT

* Consumers may want labelling due to animal welfare reasons

* EU mulls temporary ban on use of meat from cloned animals

LONDON, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Meat and milk from cloned cattle show no difference in composition from that of traditionally bred cows and so is unlikely to pose a food safety risk, an advisory committee to Britain's food safety regulator said.

The Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes, following an open meeting on Thursday, said that consumers still may want to see effective labelling of products from clones and their offspring partly due to animal welfare concerns.

The European Commission has recently recommended introducing a five-year ban on the use of cloned animals for food production in the European Union. EU member states and the EU parliament are currently debating the proposal.

Meat or milk from the descendants of clones would not be subject to the ban.

Earlier this year, food safety watchdog the Food Standards Agency (FSA) said it had found that meat from the offspring of a cloned cow had entered the UK food chain and been eaten without required authorisation. [ID:nLDE6730UK]

Brendan Curran, a geneticist from Queen Mary, University of London, said the committee's conclusion was consistent with the findings of regulatory bodies in other countries.

"Food safety risks aside, however, there is an ethical dimension to this technology that causes concern," he said, adding that several studies had shown abnormalities in foetal development and in the neonates of cloned animals

"Therefore, one of the significant issues regulatory bodies must deal with in deciding whether to permit the use of cloned animals in breeding programmes will be whether the usefulness of this technique in animal breeding outweighs its impact on animal wellbeing," Curran added.

The Soil Association, Britain's largest organic certification body, said in a statement on Friday that more research was required.

"It is not good enough to say that the meat and milk from cloned animals is 'unlikely' to pose a food safety risk. There are insufficient long-term studies into the impacts of cloned foodstuffs on human health," the Soil Association said. (Reporting by Nigel Hunt; Editing by Jane Baird)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.


-->