308,326 of 350,000 signatures

Commissioner for Environment Virginijus Sinkevičius, Commissioner for Health and Food Safety Stella Kyriakides, the European Commission, the European Council and Carole Dieschbourg, Minister for the Environment, Climate and Sustainable Development

Petition

I call on you to prevent the release of gene drive organisms into the environment and to work for a global moratorium on the release of gene drive organisms at the Conference Of the Parties (COP) of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

Why is this important?

Imagine genetically engineered mosquitoes designed to inherit their genes at a very fast pace, jeopardise the food chain, and wipe out their natural siblings by making them infertile. [1]

According to scientists there is a risk that the so called gene drive could even spread from mosquitoes to butterflies, killing pollinators in masses, risking crops, plants and entire ecosystems. [2]

Nobody pushing the new technology has a solution to mitigate those risks, but even so there are plans in action to make this a reality. Most of the funding to make this happen is being provided by the US military and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

In the lead up to the key UN meeting in 2021, there will be important decisions taken at expert conferences. The EU is represented at all these conferences. The European Parliament has already requested for the EU Commission and its Member States to call for a global moratorium on the environmental release of gene drive organisms. But that is not enough: our voices can make all the difference.

We and more than 200 organisations worldwide are calling for a global moratorium on the release of gene drive organisms to protect biodiversity. [3] The moratorium should remain in place until globally binding rules are found for the following risks and open questions:

  • Non-retrievable and uncontrollable spread: According to the current state of knowledge, once released, gene drive organisms cannot be retrieved. Nor can their spread in time and space be limited. National borders in particular, but also geographical boundaries, are meaningless to gene drive organisms.
  • Risky research: To our knowledge, gene drives have only been tested in the laboratory, but even that is risky. The escape of only a few organisms is enough to start a genetic chain reaction.
  • Genetic engineering tools are prone to error: The genetic engineering tools such as CRISPR/Cas9, which are active in the released organisms, are prone to error. Unforeseen effects at the genetic level are therefore likely.
  • It is at least complicated, but often impossible, to foresee all ecological effects: Gene drives are designed to have an effect in natural populations over generations and to be inherited dominantly. It cannot be predicted how food chains will change and how the behaviour of other animal species will change when an animal species disappears. There are as yet no guidelines for risk assessment, if this should be possible at all. The risks to humans and the environment are largely unexplored.
  • Beyond a risk assessment, a comprehensive technology assessment is necessary before gene drive organisms are released into the environment: Since the technology has far-reaching consequences and raises technical, ecological, ethical, cultural, social and regulatory questions, a technology assessment is necessary before any application in nature. Liability and compensation regulations are also not sufficiently clarified worldwide.
  • Gene drive can also be used for military purposes: The US military research institute DARPA is one of the main sponsors of Gene Drive research. [4] The UN Bioweapons Convention has been discussing for several years how the potential danger posed by gene drives as biological weapons can be limited.
  • Who decides? If gene drive organisms can and should spread worldwide, it must be clarified who is allowed to decide whether to release them. A body and decision-making mechanism on a global level is needed in which this can happen.

References

  1. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/12/191219142646.htm
  2. There is evidence from insects that a bacteria called Wolbachia can transfer genes between different insect species. So it is theoretically possible that Wolbachia genetic transfer could take place between mosquitoes and pollinating insects.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4882834/
  3. https://www.etcgroup.org/sites/www.etcgroup.org/files/files/forcing_the_farm_sign_on_letter_english_web.pdf
  4. https://www.etcgroup.org/content/gene-drive-files

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This Thursday and Friday, EU politicians will discuss a global moratorium on gene drives a newly developed technique to engineer animals and plants. By producing only males offspring, gene drives can wipe out entire species.

We call on the environment and agriculture ministers of EU Member states, to follow the recommendation of experts to not release any gene drive animals and plants into nature until we understand and know how to avoid the risks. Thanks a lot for taking the moment to send an email!

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Tweet to Carole Dieschbourg, Minister for the Environment, Climate and Sustainable Development

Thursday and Friday EU politicians will discuss a global moratorium on gene drives a newly developed technique to engineer animals and plants. By producing only males offspring, gene drives can wipe out entire species.

We call on the environment and agriculture ministers of EU Member states, to follow the recommendation of experts to not release any gene drive animals and plants into nature until we understand and know how to avoid the risks. Thanks a lot for taking the moment to send Tweets!

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Please can you chip in?

Gene drive is a genetic technology of engineering insects, animals and plants. By spreading, they can replace their natural counterparts until they’re all eradicated. We risk the collapse of entire ecosystems.

We have a good opportunity to put a moratorium on this new technology, but we need your help. Can you donate just a few euros a month to prevent the worst from happening?

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