Team:British Columbia/humanpractices/GMOLabeling
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<b>1972</b> | <b>1972</b> | ||
- | <li>Biochemist Herbert Boyer and geneticist Stanley Cohen | + | <li>Biochemist Herbert Boyer and geneticist Stanley Cohen produce the first successful recombinant DNA organism, an <i>E. coli</i> cell that expresses frog ribosomal DNA. |
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<b>1974</b> | <b>1974</b> | ||
- | <li>Biologist Rudolf Jaenisch creates the first genetically modified animal, a transgenic mouse, by introducing foreign DNA into | + | <li>Biologist Rudolf Jaenisch creates the first genetically modified animal, a transgenic mouse, by introducing foreign DNA into a mouse embryo. |
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<b>1976 </b> | <b>1976 </b> | ||
- | <li>Monsanto patents | + | <li>Monsanto patents the herbicide, Roundup. |
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<b>1982</b> | <b>1982</b> | ||
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<b>1983</b> | <b>1983</b> | ||
- | <li>The first transgenic plant, a tobacco plant resistant to antibiotics, is created at Washington University in Missouri. | + | <li>The first transgenic plant, a tobacco plant resistant to antibiotics, is created at Washington University in Missouri, USA. |
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<b>1986</b> | <b>1986</b> | ||
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<b>1992</b> | <b>1992</b> | ||
- | <li>The U.S. Department of Agriculture approves the Flavr Savr tomato, intended to be resistant to softening and consequent rotting, as the first genetically engineered food to be granted a license for human consumption. Production ceased in 1997 due to poor crop turnaround and mounting costs. | + | <li>The U.S. Department of Agriculture approves the "Flavr Savr" tomato strain, intended to be resistant to softening and consequent rotting, as the first genetically engineered food to be granted a license for human consumption. Production ceased in 1997 due to poor crop turnaround and mounting costs. |
<li>The FDA declares that genetically engineered foods are “not inherently dangerous” and do not require special safety testing or specific regulation, because they are alike and more aligned with the category of “whole foods”, which the FDA does not oversee, rather than “food products.” | <li>The FDA declares that genetically engineered foods are “not inherently dangerous” and do not require special safety testing or specific regulation, because they are alike and more aligned with the category of “whole foods”, which the FDA does not oversee, rather than “food products.” | ||
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<li>The FDA receives an application for the first genetically modified animal for human consumption. The AquAdvantage Salmon, created by AquaBounty Technologies, has a gene from the ocean pout and a growth hormone from a Chinook salmon, which allows it to “reach market size twice as fast as a traditional salmon”. The FDA determines more research is necessary to assess the safety of genetically engineered animals intended for human consumption. | <li>The FDA receives an application for the first genetically modified animal for human consumption. The AquAdvantage Salmon, created by AquaBounty Technologies, has a gene from the ocean pout and a growth hormone from a Chinook salmon, which allows it to “reach market size twice as fast as a traditional salmon”. The FDA determines more research is necessary to assess the safety of genetically engineered animals intended for human consumption. | ||
</br> | </br> | ||
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==Regulations in Place == | ==Regulations in Place == | ||
Revision as of 01:00, 29 October 2013
iGEM Home
Contents |
GMO Labeling
GMO Regulation Timeline
1972
1974
1976
1982
1983
1986
1987
1992
1994
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2003
2004
1998 - 2004
2010
Regulations in Place
Voluntary: Canada and US
Mandatory: EU, Australia, the Czech Republic, Hong Kong, and Russia, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan
Arguments For and Against GMO Labeling
Pro-labeling Arguments
Anti-labeling Arguments
Labeling Recommendations
Purpose:
Language:
Include:
Regulations: