Friends of the Earth takes on the "bioeconomy"
http://www.foe.org/news/blog/2012-04-bioeconomy-blueprint-or-biotechnology-boost
Bioeconomy Blueprint or biotechnology boost?
Posted Apr. 27, 2012
/ Posted by: Eric hoffman
Yesterday morning the White House released its National Bioeconomy Blueprint which
“outlines steps that agencies will take to drive the
bioeconomy—economic activity powered by research and innovation in the
biosciences—and details ongoing efforts across the Federal government to
realize this goal.”
Unfortunately, this new bioeconomy is not as green as the Obama
administration is making it out to be. The so-called bioeconomy is
dependent primarily on the risky, unregulated field of synthetic biology
and the use of unsustainably produced biomass to feed synthetic
organisms created by these technologies. The National Bioeconomy
Blueprint, while offering little in new substantive policy, causes more
harm than good by giving the green light to the growth and profit of the
synthetic biology industry without making any real effort to protect people and the environment from the novel risks posed by this emerging technology.
Synthetic biology is an extreme form of genetic engineering involving
the writing and rewriting of genetic code and biological systems in
order to create novel organisms that have never existed before in
nature. Novel organisms created through synthetic biology could escape
from the lab and become a new class of invasive species or pump out oil
into local waterways. Biotech workers at put at risk if organisms are
improperly contained and these synthetic bugs get inside their bodies or
are carried home with them on their clothes. Check out our issue brief,
Synthetic Biology 101, for more information on what exactly these technologies are and the risks synthetic biology pose.
According to Andrew Pollack at the New York Times,
“much of what is in the 43-page-report…is a list of government programs
that are already under way. So it is not clear what concrete changes,
if any, will result.” But while no new major policy initiatives were
announced, the Blueprint appears to be a nod of approval for moving full
speed ahead for an unregulated and rapidly developing synthetic biology
industry.
You may recall that last month, 113 organizations from around the
world called for the proper oversight and regulation of synthetic
biology in the Principles for the Oversight of Synthetic Biology.
This global coalition demanded that the Precautionary Principle be
applied to the governance of synthetic biology and that a moratorium be
placed on the environmental release and commercial use of synthetic
organisms until proper national and international laws have been
established to ensure synthetic biology does not harm people or the
environment.
Unfortunately, the Obama White House is moving in the exact opposite
direction with this new initiative. The National Bioeconomy Blueprint
calls for expanded development of “essential bioeconomy technologies”
such as synthetic biology and identify points to reduce regulatory
barriers for the biotechnology industry. One of the White House’s main
strategic objectives is to “unlock the promise of synthetic biology” by
making strategic investments in synthetic biology that “have the
potential to move the bioeconomy forward in all sectors.”
The Blueprint quotes President Obama’s Bioethics Commission, which recommended back in 2010,
that federal actions be taken “to ensure that America reaps the
benefits of synthetic biology while identifying appropriate ethical
boundaries and minimizing identified risks” of synthetic biology.
Unfortunately those recommendations, which were publically criticized by Friends of the Earth and 57 other organizations from around the world,
looked to self-regulation to guide developments in synthetic biology
instead of developing actual laws and regulations that are specifically
tailored to the novel risks posed by synthetic biology.
The claim that the government will “minimize identified risks” from
synthetic biology sounds great but so far they have failed to even look
at these risks. According to a report from the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,
of the $430 million spent by the federal government on synthetic
biology between 2005 and 2010, zero projects were identified that
focused on risk assessments related to the accidental or intentional
release of synthetic organisms from the lab. Instead of truly balancing
the potential benefits and risks of synthetic biology, the Bioeconomy
Blueprint gives the industry the green light to rush ahead while turning
a blind eye to the risks.
The bioeconomy also carries serious socio-economic risks. As the ETC Group highlighted in its brilliant report, The New Biomassters: Synthetic B iology and the Next Assault on Biodiversity and Livelihoods,
the new bioeconomy is not as green as it seems. The bioeconomy is, in
fact, “a red-hot resource grab of the lands, livelihoods, knowledge and
resources of peoples in the global South, where most of that biomass is
located.” As the report points out, 86 percent of global biomass is
located in the tropics and subtropics, and a push for a new bioeconomy,
enabled by synthetic biology, will only “accelerate the pace of forest
destruction and land acquisition in the South in order to feed the
economies of the North.” Biomass, or land on which it is grown, is not
an unlimited resource, as the Blueprint seems to assume.
And just yesterday, a new report was released by the Global Forest Coalition titled Bio-economy Versus Biodiversity,
which argues how the so-called bioeconomy will have “serious negative
impacts…on forests, forest-dependent peoples, and biodiversity.”
According to Simone Lovera, Executive Director of the Global Forest
Coalition, “the bioeconomy is a massive effort to privatize nature for
corporate profit…high-risk technologies like synthetic biology,
nanotechnology, and genetically engineered trees will only drive the
planetary ecosystem further into crisis.” This report concludes by
challenging the Obama administration and other global leaders to
“abandon the green sheen of biotechnology and market-based conservation
schemes, and to affirm the kinds of biocultural approaches demonstrated
by Indigenous Peoples and social movements in the Global South that
eschew infinite economic growth for sustainable livelihoods, local
living economies, and integration with the natural world.”
The Obama administration had a chance to take the driver’s seat and
ensure that synthetic biology does not cause more harm than good.
Instead, the White House is sitting in the passenger’s seat while the
biotechnology industry speeds ahead without proper regulation, safety
assessment, or oversight.
In the end the National Bioeconomy Blueprint feels more like an
attempt for President Obama to claim he is creating jobs. What we really
need is a serious discussion over how we should regulate new
technologies and just what kind of future economy we want. If we are to
have a truly sustainable economy moving forward, it cannot be based on
risky, unregulated (and patented) technologies such as synthetic biology
that pose serious harms to the environment and our health. The risks
posed by synthetic biology and other biotechnologies must be studied
before we rush forward with this new bioeconomy in which industry stands
to make large profits while the risks are spread to the public.
Etiquetas: en, Friends of the Earth, Synthetic Biology
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