International group of scientists, conservationists and
leading environmental advocates have rejected potentially dangerous
genetic engineering tool.
As thousands of government representatives and conservationists convene in Oahu, Hawai’i this week for the 2016 World Conservation Congress,
international conservation and environmental leaders are sounding the
alarm about the use of gene drives – a controversial new synthetic
biology technology intended to intentionally cause species to become
extinct.
In a digital vote released August 26 by the International Union for
the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), scientists and government
representatives voted overwhelmingly for IUCN and its commissions to
adopt a de facto moratorium on support or endorsement of research into
gene drives for conservation or other purposes. News of the vote comes
as an important open letter is published on the topic.
Scientists and environmental experts and organisations from around
the globe have advocated for a halt to proposals for the use of gene
drive technologies in conservation.
Announced on Thursday, a long list
of environmental leaders, including Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, genetics
professor and broadcaster Dr. David Suzuki, Dr. Fritjof Capra,
entomologist Dr. Angelika Hilbeck, Indian environmental activist Dr.
Vandana Shiva, environmental justice advocate Nnimmo Bassey and organic
pioneer and biologist Nell Newman, have lent their support to an open letter, “A Call for Conservation with a Conscience: No Place for Gene Drives in Conservation.”
The letter states, in part: “Gene drives, which have not been tested
for unintended consequences, nor fully evaluated for ethical and social
impacts, should not be promoted as conservation tools.”
“Gene drives are basically a technology that aims for a targeted
species to go extinct,” explains ecologist and entomologist Dr. Angelika
Hilbeck, President of the European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility
(ENSSER). “While this may appear to some conservationist professionals
to be a ‘good’ thing and a ‘silver bullet’ to handle complicated
problems, there are high risks of unintended consequences that could be
worse than the problems they are trying to fix.”
Both the leading developers of the technology and also those
concerned about gene drives will be attending this week’s congress and
holding events to raise awareness, hype promises or highlight the
potential hazards of gene drives.
One near-term gene drive proposal,
promoted by U.S.-based non-governmental organisation Island
Conservation, intends to release gene drive mice on islands to eradicate them.
Another led by the University of Hawai’i would develop gene drive mosquitoes
for use in Hawaii to combat avian malaria which affects honeycreeper
birds.
The debate around gene drives is likely to resurface later this
year at the negotiations of the United Nations Biodiversity Convention
in Cancun, Mexico in December.
“Gene drives, also known as ‘mutagenic chain reactions,’ aims to
alter DNA so an organism always passes down a desired trait, hoping to
change over time the genetic makeup of an entire species,” explains Dr
Vandana Shiva of Navdanya. “This technology would give biotech
developers an unprecedented ability to directly intervene in evolution,
to dramatically modify ecosystems, or even crash a targeted species to
extinction.”
“To lose sight of the problem of biodiversity loss in favor of false
solutions and short-term techno-fixes such as gene drives is a dangerous
path,” said Erich Pica, President of Friends of the Earth.
“There are real community-based conservation efforts that are truly
sustainable and should be scaled up and supported. We are very concerned
gene drives will drive forward destructive agricultural practices or be
used for military purposes – speculative conservation claims are at
best an unfounded diversion or smokescreen.”
Signatories of the letter, which include indigenous organisations and
legal experts, raised legal and moral questions, citing an “ethical
threshold that must not be crossed without great restraint.”
“From military testing to GMO crops, and now gene drives, Hawai’i
should not be treated as a test zone for risky and experimental
technologies,” said Walter Ritte, Native Hawaiian activist and hunter.
“What happens in Hawai’i must be discussed with residents, not decided
from a lab on the other side of the continent. Hawaiians should decide
what is best for Hawai’i.”
Some of the signing organisations will be holding a Knowledge Café
event as part of the IUCN World Conservation Congress at 8:30 am (HST)
on Monday, September 5.
In response to upcoming proposals to release gene drive organisms in
Hawaii, the local organisation Hawai’i SEED will be hosting an
educational session on gene drives in the evening on Tuesday, September
6.
***From Environews
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