25 July 2000
Green Party co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons today said she was disappointed at the decision to allow state scientists to
insert human genes into a herd of cattle for research.
The Environmental Risk Management Authority (ERMA) today approved an application by the Crown Research Institute,
AgResearch, to produce a herd of cattle containing a human gene.
“The current law provides no guidance to ERMA on how to deal with public concerns over ethics and values. ERMA deals
solely with environmental risk and is not qualified or resourced to consider ethics or values. That is why I proposed we
have a Royal Commission of Inquiry,” said Ms Fitzsimons.
“Now we have an inquiry, but before any public submissions have been heard and any ethical debate entered into we have
ground-breaking new technology approved. Maori, and the local hapu Ngati Wairere still hold concerns about this project
and we have a Treaty obligation to take them seriously,” she said.
Ms Fitzsimons said the project and the scientists would be taxpayer-funded and that there was no public mandate to be
undertaking this most controversial work.
“This application should have been halted by the Government until at least the end of the Royal Commission. What we have
here is a government agency pre-empting government decisions,” she said.
“ERMA have imposed a number of checks on these experiments such as double fencing, microchipping the cattle and trying
to prevent all biological waste and milk entering the wider environment. However this misses the point. Nobody is really
worried about these cattle escaping.”
These transgenic cattle will be the second herd of animals containing human genes after PPL Therapeutics were granted
permission to develop a flock of up to 10,000 transgenic sheep in the Waikato.
Ends
Jeanette Fitzsimons MP: 04 470 6661, 025 586 068
Jonathan Hill (press secretary): 04 470 6719, 021 110 1133