Difference between revisions of "European Food Safety Authority"

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==Resources==
 
==Resources==
*Corporate Europe Observatory. 2011. [http://www.corporateeurope.org/system/files/files/article/EFSA_board_conflict.pdf Serial conflicts of interest on EFSA'a management board]. February.
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*Corporate Europe Observatory. 2011. [http://www.corporateeurope.org/system/files/files/article/EFSA_board_conflict.pdf Serial conflicts of interest on EFSA's management board]. February.
 
::Focuses on links with the food and feed industry.
 
::Focuses on links with the food and feed industry.
 
*Earth Open Source. 2011. [http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/File:Eu_pesticidefoodsafety.pdf Europe's Pesticide and Food Safety Regulators - Who Do They Work For?] April.
 
*Earth Open Source. 2011. [http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/File:Eu_pesticidefoodsafety.pdf Europe's Pesticide and Food Safety Regulators - Who Do They Work For?] April.

Revision as of 19:46, 1 June 2011

Foodspin badge.png This article is part of the Foodspin project of Spinwatch.

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) describes itself as:

the keystone of European Union (EU) risk assessment regarding food and feed safety. In close collaboration with national authorities and in open consultation with its stakeholders, EFSA provides independent scientific advice and clear communication on existing and emerging risks.[1]

GMO Panel

The GMO Panel of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) assesses new genetically modified organisms (GMOs) for approval in Europe and reports to the European Commission, which then submits its decision to the European Council. In the event that the Council cannot reach a qualified majority for or against authorisation, the matter is sent back to the Commission, which is free to authorise the GMO based on a special regulatory procedure called comitology.

The EFSA has never given a negative opinion on a GMO put forward for approval, whatever the scientific concerns about its safety.[2] In July 2009 it gave a positive opinion even on Monsanto's GM maize MON810, which is banned for health and environmental reasons in six EU Member States as allowed under EU law.[3]

Criticism of GMO Panel

Dr Arpad Pusztai is an internationally renowned scientist who conducted groundbreaking research into the safety of GM potatoes and was fired and gagged when he found problems and spoke about them on British television. In an email to GMWatch (dated 10 August 2008) on the tenth anniversary of his 15 seconds of TV fame, he wrote of GM food safety and the EFSA's GMO Panel:

On this anniversary I have to admit that, unfortunately, not much has changed since 1998. In one of the few sentences I said in my broadcast ten years ago, I asked for a credible GM testing protocol to be established that would be acceptable to the majority of scientists and to people in general. 10 years on we still haven't got one. Instead, in Europe we have an unelected EFSA GMO Panel with no clear responsibility to European consumers, which invariably underwrites the safety of whatever product the GM biotech industry is pushing onto us.

Conflicts of interest on EFSA's management board

In March 2011 Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) highlighted in a report that at least four members of EFSA’s management board are employed by or otherwise linked with food industry lobby groups and other commercial interests, a situation that creates potential conflicts of interest. These board members are: Matthias Horst (director general of the German food industry lobby BVE), Milan Kováč (director of International Life Sciences Institute Europe), Jiří Ruprich (Danone Institute) and Piet Vanthemsche (farmers’ lobby COPA and Agri Investment Fund).[4]

GMO Panel members

Affiliations

Funding

Contact

Address:
European Food Safety Authority
Largo N. Palli 5/A
43121 Parma
ITALY
Phone:+39 0521 036111
Fax: +39 0521 036110
Website: http://www.efsa.europa.eu/

Resources

Focuses on links with the food and feed industry.
EFSA. 2011. Response to Earth Open Source report, Europe's Pesticide and Food Safety Regulators - Who Do They Work For? 14 April.
Focuses on links with the pesticide/chemicals industry.
Earth Open Source. 2011. Reply to letter from Catherine Geslain-Lanéelle, executive director of EFSA, regarding our report: Europe’s pesticide and food safety regulators: Who do they work for? 20 April.
SETAC. 2011. Response to Earth Open Source report, Europe's Pesticide and Food Safety Regulators - Who Do They Work For? 28 April.
Focuses on links with the GM (genetic modification) industry.

Notes

  1. European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), EFSA website, accessed 2 July 2009
  2. Commission hesitant to approve more GM crops, Euractiv.com, 8 May 2008, accessed 2 July 2009
  3. EFSA back in bed with GMO industry: MON810 opinion shown to Monsanto but not to public, press release, Friends of the Earth, 30 June 2009, accessed 2 July 2009
  4. Corporate Europe Observatory, Serial conflicts of interest on EFSA’s management board, 23 February 2011, acc 16 Mar 2011