Scientists In Support Of Agricultural Biotechnology
We, the undersigned members of the scientific community, believe that recombinant DNA techniques constitute powerful and
safe means for the modification of organisms and can contribute substantially in enhancing quality of life by improving
agriculture, health care, and the environment.
The responsible genetic modification of plants is neither new nor dangerous. Many characteristics, such as pest and
disease resistance, have been routinely introduced into crop plants by traditional methods of sexual reproduction or
cell culture procedures. The addition of new or different genes into an organism by recombinant DNA techniques does not
inherently pose new or heightened risks relative to the modification of organisms by more traditional methods, and the
relative safety of marketed products is further ensured by current regulations intended to safeguard the food supply.
The novel genetic tools offer greater flexibility and precision in the modification of crop plants.
No food products, whether produced with recombinant DNA techniques or with more traditional methods, are totally without
risk. The risks posed by foods are a function of the biological characteristics of those foods and the specific genes
that have been used, not of the processes employed in their development. Our goal as scientists is to ensure that any
new foods produced from recombinant DNA are as safe or safer than foods already being consumed.
Current methods of regulation and development have worked well. Recombinant DNA techniques have already been used to
develop 'environmentally-friendly' crop plants with traits that preserve yields and allow farmers to reduce their use of
synthetic pesticides and herbicides. The next generation of products promises to provide even greater benefits to
consumers, such as enhanced nutrition, healthier oils, enhanced vitamin content, longer shelf life and improved
medicines.
Through judicious deployment, biotechnology can also address environmental degradation, hunger, and poverty in the
developing world by providing improved agricultural productivity and greater nutritional security. Scientists at the
international agricultural centers, universities, public research institutions, and elsewhere are already experimenting
with products intended specifically for use in the developing world.
We hereby express our support for the use of recombinant DNA as a potent tool for the achievement of a productive and
sustainable agricultural system. We also urge policy makers to use sound scientific principles in the regulation of
products produced with recombinant DNA, and to base evaluations of those products upon the characteristics of those
products, rather than on the processes used in their development.
ENDS