Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. OK's Genetically Engineered B.C. Apples For Sale South Of Border

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Feb, 2015 01:58 PM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia firm that created a controversial apple genetically engineered not to turn brown has been given a stamp of approval by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
     
    Okanagan Specialty Fruits Inc. of Summerland, B.C., spent almost five years getting the U.S. approval after engineering its Arctic apples to retain their colour after being exposed to air.
     
    The U.S. government body announced Friday the apple is unlikely to pose a risk to agriculture or plants inside the country and the company can now market the product to growers.
     
    Company president Neal Carter said critics of the apple need to understand the fruit is safe for consumption.
     
    "This is a very, very arduous, rigorous and comprehensive review in science and regulatory oversight. These are the safest apples in the world," he said. "They're certainly the most tested apples in the world."
     
    Unlike conventional breeding for a new variety of apple, spending years cross pollinating varieties, this process targeted a single gene of the apple, he said.
     
    "In our case it's very specific. We know exactly the gene we're targeting," he said. "It's the equivalent of sort of flicking a light switch versus turning off the power grid to New York City."
     
    Fred Steele of the B.C. Fruit Growers Association said that while the U.S. government and scientists may approve of the product, consumers may not, and the apple poses a risk to the organic market. 
     
    But Carter said the Arctic apples are a huge opportunity to introduce the product to the food-service industry.
     
    He said baby carrots changed consumers' consumption in the 1990s and the Arctic apple could do the same thing.
     
    "We're going to see apples in new shapes and forms in products and that's going to be really exciting."
     
    Carter said he expects the golden and granny varieties of the apple to be available on U.S. grocery shelves by late 2016 and he hopes the Canadian government will make a decision on the product soon.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers

    Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers
    NEW YORK — A Canadian man pleaded not guilty Saturday to U.S. charges that he sent money and provided other long-distance support to Tunisian jihadists believed responsible for a 2009 suicide attack in Iraq that killed five American soldiers.

    Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers

    Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler

    Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler
      WHISTLER, B.C. — A missing snowboarder has been found in good condition after spending three nights in the backcountry in Whistler, B.C.

    Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria
    VICTORIA — A former CBC radio host hopes to take her fight for the embattled public broadcaster all the way to Parliament Hill.

    Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006
    SURREY, B.C. — Surrey RCMP say they have made an arrest in a historic homicide dating back to 2006. Mahdi Halane was shot in the neck following a confrontation at a gas station in October 2006.

    RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A woman who died in a mobile-home fire in Chase, B.C., last week was the victim in a domestic-dispute case in 2007 and charged with killing her husband less than a year later.

    Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.
    The Pineapple Express that drenched the Vancouver area is now drifting north, with heavy downpours expected to pummel the central coast of British Columbia.

    Pineapple Express Drenches Vancouver Before Moving On To Central Coast Of B.C.