PH approves commercial use of “Golden Rice” a genetically engineered rice

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Philippines is first country to approve Vit A-enriched crop (FILE PHOTO)

The Philippines approved the commercial propagation of genetically modified Golden Rice after more than a decade of field tests.

The Department of Agriculture (DA) and its attached agency, Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) gave a formal biosafety approval last month, despite strong opposition from anti-GMO activists.

“With the biosafety permit, DA-PhilRice has now commenced producing seeds for cultivation, which usually takes 3-4 cropping seasons,” Ronan Zagado, government spokesman for the Golden Rice initiative said.

Golden Rice will be initially deployed in areas with high prevalence of Vitamin A deficiency by the third quarter of 2022, before it can become commercially available for public consumption, he added.

The Philippines had been expected to approve the widespread planting of Golden Rice as early as 2011, but faced public concerns over health risks and opposition from various sectors.

Philippines-based International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), which helped develop Golden Rice, said the Southeast Asian country, which is one of the world’s biggest rice importers, is the first nation to approve the Vitamin A-enriched grain for commercial cultivation.

Greenpeace has denounced the approval and called on the agriculture department to reverse the decision.

“The DA needs to ensure that farmers are central in a green and just recovery from the pandemic, and are supported by resilient food and farm systems in the face of the climate emergency,” said Wilhelmina Pelegrina, senior campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia.

PhilRice Executive Director John de Leon, however, allayed health risk concerns.

“We have generated extensive data on the safety (of Golden Rice) in terms of national and international safety standards,” he said.

Golden Rice has received food safety approvals from regulators in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States, and is undergoing final regulatory review in Bangladesh, according to IRRI.

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