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Public Interest Groups Urge Restaurants Not to Sell GE Fish

Public Interest Groups Urge Restaurants
Not to Sell GE Fish

NEWS RELEASE

Friends of the Earth
Center for Food Safety
Clean Water Action

October 18, 2001
For Immediate Release

Contacts: Mark Helm, 202-783-7400 x,102
(list local here)

Consumer and Environmental Coalition Asks Restaurants and Grocers Not to
Sell Genetically Engineered Fish

Washington, DC -- Friends of the Earth, the Center for Food Safety, and
Clean Water Action announced a new campaign to prevent the commercialization
of genetically engineered fish, citing potential negative health effects and
threats to wild salmon. The groups are asking seafood retailers to pledge
not to sell genetically engineered fish and to oppose their
commercialization. An application is pending for market approval of an
experimental salmon developed by Aqua Bounty Farms (also known as A/F
Protein). The Food and Drug Administration could approve the application at
any time putting the first engineered fish on dinner plates, grocery shelves
and in restaurants across the country.

"Consumer safety, environmental groups and some in the seafood industry are
calling on restaurants and grocery stores to pledge not to sell genetically
engineered fish in order to keep the natural supply from being
contaminated," said Linda Setchell, campaign coordinator for Clean Water
Action New England. "If the market for transgenic fish disappears, so will
the drive to rush this untested technology into the marine environment."

The campaign will contact the largest restaurant chains and grocers in the
U.S. that sell seafood asking them to pledge not to sell engineered fish and
to oppose its commercial introduction to avoid contamination of their
supplies. More than 50 have been contacted so far. Grocers include Kroger,
Safeway and Trader Joe's while restaurants include Long John Silver,
Applebee's and Legal Seafoods, and bagel companies include Einstein Brothers
Bagels and Chesapeake Bagel Bakery. Campaign members are awaiting responses
of several companies that are considering the pledge.

"Most people do not want to eat genetically engineered fish. We hope that
companies that sell seafood will reflect public concern for health and the
environment by making a pledge not to sell these fish," said Lisa Ramirez,
campaign coordinator for Friends of the Earth.

According to Tracie Letterman, of the Center for Food Safety, "adequate
independent studies of the health effects of eating these fish have not been
conducted." Additionally, a Purdue University study showed that the release
of just 60 engineered fish into a population of 60,000 naturally occurring
fish would cause the wild fish species to become extinct within only a few
generations. The groups expressed concern about the potential threats to
people who consume genetically engineered fish as well as the extinction
level threat they pose to wild salmon.

The groups emphasized the liability risk companies could face if the fish
turn out to be harmful or were to inadvertently enter supplies without
federal approval. In a contamination incident last year, mixing of StarLink
engineered corn into the food supply caused Taco Bell to lose $60 million in
sales, Kraft Foods to recall over 25 million taco shells, and the price of
all corn--not just genetically engineered corn--to drop dramatically in the
year 2000 harvest. That corn was not approved for human consumption due to
concerns about potential allergenicity.

The risk of contamination of existing fisheries led the State of Maryland to
pass a moratorium on the release of genetically engineered aquatic species
into waters flowing into the Chesapeake Bay in April 2001. However, no
federal legislation exists to restrict the introduction of engineered fish
into other ecosystems or even into parts of the Chesapeake Bay that lie in
other states.

Of particular ecological concern are dozens of salmon populations on both
the Pacific and Atlantic coasts already listed under the Endangered Species
Act that could be further undermined by the release of engineered salmon.
The release of fast-growing GE salmon would likely impose yet another
significant burden on this wild fish species struggling to survive.

GE salmon are designed to grow as much as ten to thirty times faster than
natural salmon. They would be raised in marine aquaculture operations (fish
farms) before being sold to stores and restaurants across the country.
Unintended releases of GE fish into the world's waters would be inevitable
as hundreds of thousands of conventional farmed fish escape every year.

New studies have shown that GE fish may be more aggressive, eat more food,
and attract more mates than wild fish. In addition, these same studies show
that although GE fish may attract more mates, their offspring would be less
fit and less likely to survive. As a result, scientists predict that GE fish
could cause some species to become extinct within only a few generations.
There are already dozens of salmon populations on both the Pacific and
Atlantic coasts that are listed for protection under the Endangered Species
Act.

While no federal laws specifically govern the regulation of genetically
engineered animals grown for human consumption, the FDA has made the
informal decision to regulate GE fish under its authority to review new
animal drugs. Given the potential toxicity, allergenicity, and aquaculture
diseases posed by the commercialization of GE fish, the campaign members
organized over 70 other organizations and individuals to join in the filing
of legal petitions earlier this year to several agencies requesting a
moratorium on the approval of GE fish until they have been properly
reviewed.

"As a food safety agency, not an environmental agency, the FDA is
ill-equipped to assess environmental impacts of engineered fish. Given its
policy of treating engineered crops as equivalent to conventional crops, the
FDA is also a biased promoter of this technology, not an impartial
regulator," added Ramirez of Friends of the Earth.

# # #

An initial list of companies contacted and the pledge they have been asked
to sign may be found at:
http://www.stopgefish.org

Additional information on engineered fish including the petition signed by
more than 70 groups
may be found at:
http://www.stopgefish.org and http://www.gefish.org

For an article about a North American seafood importer opposed to engineered
fish, see: "Industry Giants Urged to Fight GM fish" by Bent-Are Jensen,
http://www.intrafish.com/articlea.php?articleID=12533

list of companies asked to pledge not to sell GE fish:
Ahold/Giant Foods

Albertson's

Amarillo Mesquite Grill

Applebee's International Inc.

Bill Knapp's

Bruegger's Corporation

Bubba Gump Shrimp Company

Chesapeake Bagel Bakery

Chuck Muer Seafood Restaurants

Cooker Restaurant Corporation

DelHaize/Lion Foods

Eat'n Park Restaurants

Einstein Bros. Bagels

Finagle a Bagel

Fish Market

Folks Restaurant Ltd (Po Folks)

Fred Meyer

Harry Ramsden's

Joe's Crab Shack

Kash 'n Karry

Kelly's Cajun Grill International

Kroger

Landry's Seafood Restaurants

Legal Seafoods

Levy Restaurants

Long John Silver's Restaurants Inc.

Main Street and Main Incorporated (TGI Firdays & Red Fish)

McCormick & Schmick Management Group

Morton's Restaurant Group International

Myriad Restaurant Group

Pappadeaux Seafood Kitchen

Phillips Crab House Inc.

Piccadilly Cafeterias Inc.

QFC

Ralph's

Red Lobster

Red Robin

Rubio's Baja Grill

Safeway Inc.

Shari's

Shaw's

Shell's Seafood, Inc.

Shoney's Inc. & Captain D's Seafood

Sizzler

Superfresh

The Capital Grille

Trader Joe's

Walmart

Weathervane Seafoods

Whole Foods

Wild Oats


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