AquaBounty Technologies plans to sell its genetically modified salmon eggs to any fish farmer approved to grow them if the company gets U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval, something environmentalists were afraid would happen.
Ron Stotish, CEO of AquaBounty - the U.S.-based company that has a salmon egg hatchery in Prince Edward Island - said the company always planned to sell its genetically modified eggs to fish farmers willing to grow them in land-based facilities.
"They would not be going to net pens or sea cages," said Stotish. "They will all have to fulfill the requirements of the conditions for approval and sale of the product."
In the U.S, that would mean FDA approval. In other places, fish farmers would have to meet all FDA regulations and all regulatory requirements of that country, said Stotish.
The news caught environmentalist Lucy Sharratt off guard. She is coordinator of the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network, the group leading an Atlantic forum against AquaBounty. The group's final presentation is in St. John's, N.L. Thursday night.
Sharratt said an FDA environmental review released last year found the salmon wasn't a significant threat to the environment, but the review only looked at the company's egg hatching facility in Bay Fortune, P.E.I. and a fish rearing plant in Panama.
Sharratt didn't think this would allow AquaBounty to sell its eggs worldwide.
"And this is exactly where the risk to wild Atlantic salmon comes from," said Sharratt. "These multiple locations, with different environmental conditions, where there's no monitoring and enforcement of containment on in-land facilities."
Sharratt said this increases the risk these GM salmon will escape into the wild.
Random site inspections
AquaBounty says an environmental assessment would have to be done on each fish farm location, and be reviewed and approved. And the sites would be inspected to assure the fish farmer was complying with the conditions for growing these fish, such as ensuring proper containment is in place.
Authorities could make inspections visits at anytime to see that the aquaculture facility is in compliance, said Stotish. If the grower isn't in compliance, AquaBounty wouldn't be allowed to ship eggs to them anymore.
Stotish said Sharrat's concerns aren't warranted.
"It's not rocket science," said Stotish.
"You conduct the same analysis. You use the same containment provisions, you use the scientific method, you do a risk assessment. Environmental assessments are in almost every aspect of our lives, almost every day of the year: mining, fishing, you know, zoning, real estate, home construction. I mean, this is not something new or novel. It's something people know how to do and can be done."
The actual genetic alterations that have been done to the fish also help stop their spread, said Stotish. Most of the fish are sterile and all are females, so there will not only be physical containment, but biological containment as well.
Stotish feels that AquaBounty has gone to great lengths to reassure the public that this fish doesn't represent a danger. He said, if approved, it would be the most heavily regulated aquaculture product on the market.
It's been reported the FDA's environmental assessment of AquaBounty's plans have been sent to an office in the White House for review. But when the FDA will announce its decision is anyone's guess. The agency will not reveal timelines to CBC News or AquaBounty.
However, some believe the decision will be released soon and when that happens there are a few possible outcomes:
- the FDA could refuse AquaBounty's application;
- it could ask for further environmental review;
- or it could give the go-ahead.
If the FDA says yes, there will be a 30-day public comment period and the FDA's final environmental assessment of AquaBounty's plans will be made public.
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