Please prepare the vocabulary of the following articles for next week's translation workshop
Cloned cattle food safe to eat, say scientists
The BBC's Pallab Ghosh
looks at how cloned meat reaches the dinner table
Meat and milk from cloned
cattle and their offspring is safe to consume, independent scientists have said.
The Advisory Committee on
Novel Foods and Processes said it believed the food was unlikely to present any
risk.
The Food Standards Agency
will discuss the conclusions in December before providing further advice to
ministers.
Questions raised by reports
over the summer that meat from cloned animals' offspring was sold to consumers
"remain unanswered", the Soil Association says.
However, the committee's
scientists said there was no substantial difference between meat and milk from
cloned animals and produce from conventional livestock, in line with a number of
other scientific assessments.
Three cases had emerged of
meat linked to a cloned cow being sold in the UK, according to the Food
Standards Agency (FSA).
Two involved Highlands farm
bulls grown from embryos of a cow cloned in the US, while the third involved
meat from a male calf being sent to a London butcher's shop.
Disadvantage claim
The FSA said the calf was
the offspring of one of eight animals born in the UK from embryos produced by
the US cloned cow.
FSA chief scientist Andrew
Wadge said: "The Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes has confirmed
that meat and milk from cloned cattle and their offspring shows no substantial
difference to conventionally produced meat and milk, and therefore is unlikely
to present a food safety risk."
Not only does cloning have
a negative impact on animal welfare, we also have no long-term evidence for the
impacts on health”
End Quote Soil Association
In the US, South America
and Asia, farmers can breed from cloned cows, sheep and pigs in order to
increase milk and meat production.
However, farmers in Europe
who want to introduce the products of cloned animals into the food chain require
specific authorisation because they are considered "novel foods".
BBC science correspondent
Pallab Ghosh says this is in effect a ban. Breaches of the Novel Food
Regulations can attract a fine of up to £5,000.
Some European farmers
believe they are being put at a disadvantage by being denied the option of using
the technology, our correspondent adds.
Critics say there are
strong ethical and animal welfare reasons to ban its use in European
agriculture.
"There are many unanswered
questions on the issue of cloning animals - both ethical and practical - and
insufficient regulation," said a Soil Association spokeswoman.
"Not only does cloning have
a negative impact on animal welfare, we also have no long-term evidence for the
impacts on health."
The European Commission
proposes to ban meat and milk from clones and their offspring. The FSA board
will discuss this at its December meeting, with the outcome influencing
Britain's negotiations on the issue in Europe.
A spokesman said the board
had asked for clarity from Europe but that any change in position was unlikely
to come in the short term.
"It is for individual
member states to interpret European law but, obviously, we differ from the
commission on this," he said.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-11844141