Inventing
a GMO Apple That Won’t Brown
The
demonstration highlights the Arctic apple, as shown in a video made by its
producer, Okanagan Specialty Fruits Inc. More than a decade in the making,
Okanagan’s new Arctic apple has been genetically modified to resist browning
when cut open or sliced.
Federal
regulators are weighing whether to approve the Arctic apple for sale in the
U.S. If approved, the apple would be the first non-browning variety on the
market, and could be among the country’s first products required to carry a
genetically modified label.
Such
a product would tests consumers’ appetite for genetically modified foods. Corn,
soybean and other commodities that are genetically engineered are common U.S.
food ingredients, but few forms of genetically modified raw produce are
available on stores shelves.
Neal
Carter, co-founder of the Canada-based Okanagan, hopes approval of his apple
will “help soften consumer concerns of biotech crops in general.”
Some
farmers have asked the Agriculture Department to ban the new apple from
entering the U.S. market on concerns it could compromise the fruit’s reputation
as a healthy, wholesome food. Several individuals commenting on the agency’s
assessment of the fruit said Okanagan was “playing God” with the apple.
“The
U.S. produces millions of bushels of apples,” said Douglas Rowley, general
manager of Mountainland Apples Inc., a Utah-based company that packs and ships
apples to retail customers. “Now all of a sudden, we want to throw in one that
we just make up. I just don’t agree with it.”
Okanagan
says the Arctic apple works by shutting off the enzyme that initiates browning
on the apple’s flesh. Mr. Carter hopes the non-browning trait will reinvigorate
the apple industry in the same way baby-cut carrots helped create a surge in
carrot demand. Okanagan envisions a world where cooks can take their time
slicing apples for pies and dinner guests linger over apple wedges on their
salads.
‘72%
of consumers consider it important to avoid genetically engineered ingredients
when buying food’
The
Agriculture Department and the Food and Drug Administration are both reviewing
the Arctic apple but only the USDA’s approval is needed for it to be sold to
U.S. consumers. That agency is looking at whether the Arctic apple poses a
threat to other plants. It said in a 2013 draft assessment that the apple is
unlikely to do so.
The
FDA is examining the potential for human health problems. While its approval
isn’t required, the FDA does have the authority to require Okanagan to label
its food as genetically modified if it determines the apple is materially
different from conventionally grown varieties.
The
issue of whether food makers must label products that contain modified
ingredients is bubbling up in November elections. Voters in Colorado and Oregon
will vote on ballot measures that impose mandatory labeling. Vermont passed a
similar law that goes into effect in 2016 although it’s being challenged in
court.
The
food industry is fighting the measures and has successfully defeated labeling
proposals in California and Washington, the largest apple-producing state in
the country.
A
2014 survey conducted by Consumer Reports found that 72% of consumers consider
it important to avoid genetically engineered ingredients when buying food.
Sarah
Dressel, retail manager for Dressel Farms in New York, said visitors to her
family’s farmstand regularly ask whether the fruit offered for sale has been
modified. “They have the idea that there’s genetically modified food everywhere
and they have to check,” said Ms. Dressel, who believes the Arctic apple would
be safe.
The
U.S. Apple Association also believes the Arctic
apple is safe but questions whether there is a need for a non-browning variety
in the first place, spokeswoman Wendy Brannen said. “Everything with this
particular apple is so new,” she said.
Lemon
juice can help prevent apples from browning, as can store-bought solutions.
Crunch Pak, a leading producer of sliced apples, discovered a mix of vitamin C
and calcium that prevents apples from showing their age for 21 days.
The
market for U.S. genetically modified products is dominated by corn, soybeans,
cotton and sugarbeets—all of which have been modified to withstand pesticides
and herbicides. These traits make life easier for the farmers and the crops, as
a result, have been quickly adopted.
The
Arctic apple offers no such benefit to farmers. If the apple is approved,
Okanagan plans to start by rolling out modified varieties of Golden Delicious
and Granny Smith apples, while other varieties could follow. It doesn’t
currently sell its apples commercially in any country.
Jim
Baird, operator of a 250-acre farm in Washington, is among those asking USDA to
block the apple and questioned whether the non-browning apple is a solution in
search of a problem. “Sure the apple goes brown on an hors d’oeuvre
plate but they’re no less healthy to eat,” he said.
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