http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/7897078/Clones-is-it-safe-to-eat-dairy-or-beef-from-a-cloned-cow.html

Clones: is it safe to eat dairy or beef from a cloned cow?
Following the revelation that meat or dairy products from the offspring of 
cloned cows has entered the food chain, two experts give their opinion on 
whether it is safe. 
By Louise Gray, Environment Correspondent
Published: 3:00PM BST 04 Aug 2010


No 

Food Standards Agency (FSA) research found that most British people think that 
cloning animals is interfering with nature, and that the only winners would be 
organisations like biotech companies and food retailers, with no benefit to 
consumers. The public are worried about the animal welfare horrors that cloning 
involves, and concerned about the safety of food from cloned animals. Yet FSA 
boss Tim Smith says he has 'no concerns'. Who is right? 

Cloning and GM crops takes farming in a direction which the public rightly 
distrust. The only major international scientific assessment of the future of 
agriculture, in the face of climate change and increased population, supports 
the public. 

Some 400 international scientists concluded that in future we must farm in ways 
which increase diversity of cropping to improve food security, and rely less on 
artificial fertilisers (made from fossil fuels), as oil becomes scarcer and 
more expensive. The development of cloned animals dramatically narrows the 
genetic base on which our food production relies, just when we need to widen 
it. Cloned dairy and beef cattle are designed for maximum meat and milk output, 
but that requires massive inputs of grain and soya. Cattle should eat grass we 
can't eat, not grain we can. Soya increasingly comes from cleared rainforests. 

This is the wrong direction not just for farming, but for the planet. For human 
health, no evidence of danger is not the same as safe. There's been no long 
term safety testing of meat or milk from cloned cattle - if business interests 
get their way, there never will be. It is a scandal that we're even considering 
cloning animals, given that we already know that terrible suffering it imposes 
on surrogate mothers and the many cloned offspring where things go wrong. On 
this, the public are right. 

Peter Melchett, Policy Director, Soil Association 


Yes 

In order to make their assessment of the safety of food from cloned animals the 
U.S. regulatory agency, the Food and Drug Administration, completed a detailed 
analysis of all of the cloned animals born in the USA before the time of their 
study in 2007. 

Detailed independent analyses were made of the composition of milk and meat 
from cloned animals and their offspring. As a measure of the basic metabolism 
of the animals they also monitored blood composition. These measurements in 
clones were compared with measurement from genetically very similar animals 
raised on the same farms. They also took note of all of the relevant 
information available from other countries. 

After extensive analyses, they concluded that they could find no difference 
between healthy cloned animals and genetically similar animals produced by 
normal reproduction. (see 
http://www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinary/SafetyHealth/AnimalCloning/ucm055513.htm 
for a summary). 

This evidence, combined with our understanding about the basic biology of 
cloning, would support the conclusion that food from clones or their offspring 
is safe to eat. 

By contrast, there is a clear reason to be concerned about the use of cloning 
in animal breeding. 

The production of cloned animals with the present procedures is associated with 
a greater than normal death of foetuses during pregnancy, difficulties at birth 
and death of animals after birth. The precise frequency and nature of these 
disturbing effects varies from one species to another and may vary with the 
cloning procedure that is used. 

The significance of these abnormalities is viewed differently in the USA and 
Europe. In this country and the rest of Europe it is judged that the benefits 
in animal breeding that are gained by the use of cloning do not justify the 
risk of causing suffering to the animals. By contrast, in the USA cloning in 
agriculture is accepted. Hence embryos from cloned animals, such as those that 
were used in the present case, are available for import into the UK. 

Thus, while the scientific evidence seems to confirm that cloned meat and milk 
are safe, large-scale agricultural cloning raises troubling ethical concerns 
about animal welfare. 

Professor Sir Ian Wilmut, the creator of 'Dolly the sheep' 

Related Articles
  a.. FSA admits tracking cloned cows 'impossible' 
  b.. Keep out the clones, say campaigners 
  c.. Meat produced from cloned animal entered food chain 
  d.. Clones, milk, and nuclear-powered cow terror 
  e.. Cloned milk should be fine, says geneticist 
  f.. FSA investigation into meat from offspring of cloned cow 








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