January 17, 2013
EFSA Releases Data on Monsanto's Genetically Modified Corn
Following high level of public interest, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) ruled that there was no need to re-evaluate the safety of NK603, a genetically modified corn made by Monsanto Co.
Many consumers in Europe remain skeptical about the use of genetically modified organisms, which are grown widely in such countries as the US and Brazil. This particular corn, known as NK603, caused controversy last year when a study linked the crop to cancer in rats. However, the EFSA ruled there was no need to re-evaluate the safety of NK603 as that study, by the University of Caen, had serious defects in its design and methodology.
"While the authority has already made available these data upon specific request on several occasions, any member of the public or scientific community will now be able to examine and utilise the full data sets used in this risk assessment," the European Union's risk assessment body for food and food safety said.
The EU has authorised the import of about 40 genetically-modified products, including NK603. However, only two genetically modified seeds have been approved for cultivation in the EU, Monsanto's MON810 corn and a starch potato called Amflora, developed by Germany's BASF.
"Risk assessment is an evolving science and the EFSA is always willing to review its past work should new robust science bring a new perspective to any of the authority's previous findings," the EFSA's executive director Catherine Geslain-Laneelle said. The EFSA said the release of the NK603 data is part of a "continuing commitment to openness" and will "further enhance transparency in its decision-making processes."










