‘Clone-free’ labels sought for food

WASHINGTON — With the Food and Drug Administration having declared that meat and milk from cloned animals are safe, opponents of food from clones are shifting their fight — to how such fare is labeled.

Although the FDA said last week that it will not require special labels on foods from clones, legislation already introduced in the Senate could force the agency’s hand. Short of that, many consumers are demanding that the agency allow food from conventional animals to be labeled “clone-free” — a marketing move that could dash industry hopes of getting beyond the public debate over clones.

Separately, some consumer groups are wondering aloud how the FDA will live up to its promise to keep an eye on the quickly evolving field of animal cloning and protect the public from unexpected problems.

The agency has a strategy for doing so, laid out in a “risk management plan” released last week alongside its larger “risk assessment.” But its plans depend heavily on the cooperation of the companies making the clones, an approach that critics say is less than reassuring.

Bruce Knight, undersecretary for marketing at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which now has the task of helping to get food from clones to the market, expressed optimism last week that producers and consumers will find common ground.

“We’ll be working closely with stakeholders to ensure a smooth and seamless transition into the marketplace for these products,” Knight said.

Yet skirmishes seem certain.

A fight over labeling is perhaps the surest — one likely to be led in part by Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., who has introduced legislation that would require labels.

Clone companies oppose labels, seeing them as little more than a tool to help wary consumers avoid clone-derived products. Companies note that meat and milk products from conventionally bred animals are not labeled with details about how those animals were conceived. And the FDA has generally reserved mandatory labeling for things that present a real risk.

But even if calls for labeling fail, the FDA could respond to public pressure with the clone-free labels for products not from clones.

The FDA may allow such labels, even in the absence of safety concerns, if the claims on the labels can be verified. That is a difficult bar to clear for clone-free milk and meat because those products are chemically indistinguishable from their equivalents made from clones. But there is a precedent.

Years ago, the FDA relented under consumer pressure and allowed special labels on dairy products from animals that are not treated with recombinant bovine somatotropin (rbST), a hormone that some farmers give their cows to boost milk production.

Milk from cows treated with rbST is indistinguishable from untreated cows’ milk. But the agency accepts the assurances of an independent verification system that tracks untreated cows, and allows the labels as long as they do not suggest that one product is more wholesome than the other.

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