A Response To Issues And Values Related To Genetically
Modified Organisms:
A Statement of the Rural Life Committee of the North Dakota Conference
of Churches
Humankind was given responsibility for creation and its
stewardship. Such responsibility must be considered in the context of the full
time span of creation. It must be carried out with deep respect for life and the
complexity of ecological relationships among varieties of life forms, humankind,
and the environment. Such stewardship requires informed and careful discernment
of the opportunities and limitations within the natural order of creation. It
must uphold the sacredness of life and creation. We recognize that the present
scientific capability of transferring genetic materials among different species
has created a wide range of scientific, social, political, legal, economic, and
cultural questions, all of which are integrally interwoven with our ethical,
moral and religious values. We believe that rigorous examination of these issues
is required. Considering the import of these issues, it is also essential to
involve the broad base of all the stakeholders within the world's food and
agricultural systems, public policy makers and the scientific and faith
communities in the examination of these issues.
The necessary, rigorous examination of the multiplicity of these issues within
our society has not kept pace with the development and application of the
technology related to genetically modified organisms. We must recognize from the
outset that our quest for answers can only be successful if we know the full
component of questions that need to be asked. We believe that we have only begun
to understand what questions need to be raised. Our purpose is not to construct
impossible hurdles, but to ensure that this technology is only developed and
applied upon full examination of its implications for the common good of
humankind and creation. We are now involved in the manipulation of life at its
most elemental level. Therefore the potentials for both benefit and advancement,
and catastrophe and chaos are great. Out of respect for life and creation, we
must proceed with disciplines of great caution, intentionality, and patience as
we enter this era.
Therefore, we endorse the "Precautionary
Principle" as a primary guide in the development, application and expansion
of GMO biotechnology. This principle, formalized at the 1992 United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development, emphasizes that the discipline of
precaution be carefully exercised to avoid potential harm and unforeseen and
unintended consequences. This principle requires that precaution should prevail
whenever questions of human and environmental health are involved. It mandates
restraint until cause and effect relationships are properly understood. It
places the primary burden of demonstrating safety upon the developer. Thorough
examination for the potential for harm is a prerequisite in determining and
demonstrating such safety. While we recognize that the "Precautionary
Principle" is a different policy and regulatory regimen than is currently
practiced in our nation, we believe that it is a discipline consistent with our
Christian calling
as stewards of creation and advocates of economic and social justice. We believe
this principle is particularly applicable to the development of GMO
biotechnology.
While "genetic engineering" implies a
scientific precision comparable to the construction of a building or other
inanimate tool or article, we recognize that plant and animal life is the result
of a biological, not a manufacturing process. "Genetic engineering"
seeks to establish specific and uniform genetic traits to achieve particular
goals. In essence, it is an effort to industrialize biological processes to
produce particular traits in agricultural commodities. At the same time the
biological process involves the potential of geometric combinations and
permutations in genetic structures and interrelationships. While there has been
considerable progress in understanding and mapping the genetics of various
species, there is much that is yet unknown and undiscovered within these
scientific fields about these interrelationships.
Nature abhors uniformity. Through its evolutionary imperative, nature constantly
moves towards diversity in its offspring as its means of adapting itself to the
environment and securing survival of its species. Transgenic transfer (the
introduction of genetic materials from one life form into another life form)
brings a new variable into these biological processes within the natural
environment. As stewards of creation we must consider how it will affect the
evolution of life forms in the fullness of the life span of creation, not just
within our limited lifetime. One of the first questions of further expansion of
GMO technology and use is the question of unintended genetic contamination of
non-GMO varieties of a given life form and its biological relatives. Once
introduced into the natural environment a genetically modified organism cannot
be fully contained, nor can it be retrieved. Through the natural processes of
reproduction, including pollination by wind, insects, and other means, the new
organism interacts within its own and closely related species and with other
life forms to produce offspring that may contain and pass on the GMO
characteristic. This is a particular problem for neighboring producers who wish
to grow non-GMO varieties for particular markets. For example, organic producers
in certain geographic areas have given up growing certain commodities because
they are unable to meet GMO-free certification standards. The capability of
organic production to co-exist with GMO commodity production is an unanswered
question.
Unintended genetic contamination also produces an abundance of legal questions. Since GMO traits are patented, who is liable and who has ownership when unintended genetic contamination occurs? Can a farmer save and grow seed of a genetically contaminated field? Must a farmer pay technology/patent fees upon the sale of that commodity? Such questions as well as underlying social and cultural issues related to intellectual property rights, particularly in developing nations, require reappraisal of not only of the legal consequences of granting such intellectual property rights, but also the manner and the appropriateness of granting such rights through national and international law.
The ethical and moral issues of the patenting of life forms is an unfinished discussion. When an unauthorized or unintended GMO trait gets into the food system, who is liable and what is the liability? Such questions are just beginning to be considered in national legal systems, and they may have considerable impact on interrelated economic, social, and cultural outcomes. The potential that a GMO commodity may become the dominant specie, either through economic or natural processes, is a matter of deep concern. Within the natural process, the very characteristic that allows a variety to dominate a specie may also become the characteristic that makes it peculiarly susceptible to failure. The domination of any given variety (whether or not it contains a GMO trait) in an agricultural commodity is of concern in food systems since it runs counter to the long-term interests of preserving genetic diversity. The GMO component exacerbates this concern. The potential that a GMO trait may be transferred to related unwanted species (weeds and regrowth) may make it more difficult to control such unwanted species. This is already being experienced. Just as insects evolve to become resistant to insecticides, unwanted plants will also evolve to become resistant. As such evolution occurs, it will require increased applications of the herbicide and/or new strategies of control.
We recognize that the primary beneficiary of GMO agricultural biotechnology have been the owners and distributors of that technology. The use of agricultural technologies has shifted the returns from agricultural production from the producer to the technology supplier with the result that the producer receives a smaller margin of the food dollar. The historic pattern of economic benefit among producers in the use of agricultural technology has been that the first users of a technology receive a momentary competitive advantage over other producers. However, once the use of that technology has become widespread this initial competitive advantage among producers disappears. Thus, those who have the financial base to be the first users are able to further expand and consolidate their resource base. Thus the technology becomes a mechanism of further concentration within agriculture.
The primary focus of GMO agricultural commodities has been to enhance characteristics for certain production methods of these commodities, primarily through herbicide resistance to allow for weed control, and toxicity to certain insect pests. Such characteristics have primarily facilitated the production methods of expansive, energy and capital intensive, monocultural, industrialized farming operations. The result is that such farms are able to enhance their industrialized production systems and externalize some of their production costs. While this does not necessarily increase the efficiency of overall production, it does serve to concentrate production and control of agricultural resources into fewer hands, resulting in larger farm operations and fewer farms. This trend, in turn, has environmental, economic, social, and cultural consequences and implications for rural societies at a time in which public policy directions, especially within the faith community, have sought to encourage more sustainable, and more decentralized agricultural production farming and food systems. We are also deeply concerned by the increasing concentration among agricultural processors, suppliers, and food distribution systems. The structure of agriculture and the food system are critically important within the understandings of the church related to justice for humankind and creation. While U.S. regulatory bodies have determined that GMO foods are "substantially equivalent" to conventional foods, there is little scientific knowledge or research on the long-term effects of GMO foods on human health and nutrition. Diet has become a major health issue and diet-related diseases lead the mortality rates in the United Sates. We are just beginning to fully understand and appreciate the health implications of our current food system. GMO foods add another dimension to the complexity of issues of diet and health. The lack of labelling requiring the identification of the presence of GMO materials in foods and the paucity of peer-reviewed scientific studies on the long-term safety of eating GMO foods makes it impossible for concerned persons to make informed decisions about their diet.
There are significant interrelationships between food, culture, and faith. The Christian community itself has a deep sacramental understanding of wheat and bread as the staff of life. Societies that have greater food and diet consciousness within their cultural heritage have expressed serious reservations about the presence of GMO's in food, and have either banned, or required labeling of food products. As consumers have become more aware and knowledgeable of GMO foods, there has been a corresponding increase in their concern over GMO materials in their food. Since these societies have been major purchasers of U.S. food production, the extensive presence of GMO commodities in the U.S. food system has reduced markets for producers of U.S. farm commodities. This has the effect of reducing U.S. market prices and reinforcing the position of U.S. producers as residual suppliers in the world food market. All of these concerns underline the need to exercise the precautionary principle in decision-making concerning GMO research, application and commercialization.
The North Dakota Conference of Churches and its Rural
Life Committee supports a high priority for agricultural research for the
development of production methodology and technology to provide greater
opportunity for more sustainable, community-based agricultural and food systems
that practice biodiversity. While recent GMO research and development has not
served this research priority, we do not oppose GMO research or development in
principle. We believe that free scientific inquiry into genetics and disciplined
experimentation are appropriate ways to seek to understand creation. However,
the use of such knowledge must be tempered in accordance with moral, ethical,
and religious understandings. As representatives of the church in this primary
wheat production area, we believe the precautionary principle would require the
application of a moratorium on the release of genetically modified wheat. We
would further recommended requirements to label foods containing GMO
ingredients, a review and reconsideration of the issues of patenting life-forms,
and a rigorous legislative and regulatory review of GMO commodities involving
all the stakeholders.