USDA Symbol for foods with bioengineered ingredient (left); USDA Symbol for foods with ingredients derived from bioengineering (right).
When you go to the grocery store, have you noticed foods with messaging like “no GMOs” or “contains bioengineered ingredients” on the packaging? Most likely, you have seen a range of ways food manufacturers have chosen to share (or not share) this information. But starting January 1, 2022, USDA regulations specify how foods sold in the United States that are bioengineered or contain bioengineered ingredients must disclose that information to consumers. In this blog, I will break down the history and major components of this new requirement.
Background
In July 2016, President Obama signed the National Bioengineered Food Disclosure Law (NBFDL), requiring food manufacturers to disclose the presence of bioengineered foods and ingredients. A “bioengineered” plant or animal has had a new gene inserted into it to give it a useful trait. GMO papayas, for example, have been given a gene that makes them resistant to the ringspot virus. “Bioengineering” is a synonym for the more familiar terms “GMOs,” “genetically modified”, and “genetically engineered.” A bioengineered food or ingredient must contain some of the newly introduced DNA. According to the National Academy of Sciences and the FDA, bioengineered foods are safe to eat and pose no risk to your health.
The Required Disclosure
The NBFDL and USDA’s regulations require all foods and ingredients that have modified DNA to make a disclosure using one of four methods of the food manufacturer’s choice. First, the food product can include the words “this is a bioengineered food” or “contains bioengineered ingredients” on the food product packaging near the ingredient list. Second, the food product can include the “bioengineered” symbol that USDA created in that same location. The third option is to put the disclosure online. The food manufacturer includes a QR code on the food package that takes you to an online webpage with the disclosure information (after you scan it with your smartphone camera). Finally, the food manufacturer can include a phone number on the package, which the consumer can call or text and receive the information about bioengineered content.
These last two options are the reason the requirement is considered a disclosure rather than labeling. For all the disclosure options, the food manufacturer need not identify the specific engineered ingredient, so the consumer does not know which of the many ingredients in the product are bioengineered, only that the food contains at least one bioengineered ingredient. (CSPI’s position is that food manufacturers should be able to substitute the more familiar terms for “bioengineered” in the disclosure and identify the specific bioengineered ingredients in a product.)
Example of bioengineered disclosure on the food package (above).
Example of product with electronic disclosure (above). Scanning the QR code with a cellphone takes the consumer to disclosure (below).
Food Manufacturers May Disclose “Derived From” Ingredients
If one or more of a food’s ingredients comes from a bioengineered plant, but the ingredients themselves contain no DNA from that plant, the label may carry a “derived from bioengineering” disclosure, but it does not have to. This would apply to ingredients made from a bioengineered plant that are so highly processed that none of the plant’s modified DNA remains. Some example ingredients include corn or canola oil, sugar, or high fructose corn syrup. In 2018, the Center for Science in the Public Interest—and even some food companies—urged the USDA to make “derived” disclosures mandatory, but the Trump Administration declined to do so. (CSPI’s position is that we support the “derived from” distinction but that the requirement for those foods should be mandatory not voluntary.)
Exemptions From Disclosure
The law and regulations identify several exemptions from disclosure. These include restaurant food, foods produced by very small manufacturers, and products from animals that were fed bioengineered crops. Probably the most important exemption for consumers is the exemption for food products that contain meat, poultry, and/or eggs. The new disclosure rules don’t cover products that list meat, poultry, or eggs as their first ingredient (or their second ingredient after water, stock, or broth) because those product labels are regulated by other USDA statutes. However, all food products with meat, poultry, or eggs as the second ingredient (or third where broth or water is the first ingredient) do require disclosure if they contain a bioengineered ingredient. This also means that if, in the future, we have bioengineered meat, poultry, or eggs, and they are the main ingredient in a food, there will be no disclosure requirement.
Non-GMO Disclosures
The law and regulations do not regulate claims asserting that the product is free of GMOs. Consequently, any food manufacturer can set its own standard for what constitutes a non-GMO food and claim their product meets that standard. The Non-GMO Project is a non-profit organization verifying products that meet its non-GMO standard. However, they also verify products that don’t have a GMO counterpart, such as unseasoned almonds or orange juice (there are no engineered almonds or oranges produced anywhere in the world). One way to avoid bioengineered ingredients is to purchase foods with the USDA “organic” symbol as that government program does not allow the use of bioengineered seeds, animals, or ingredients. (CSPI’s position is that USDA should have established a definition of what constitutes a “non-GMO” food.)
The Bottom Line
- GMO (bioengineered) foods currently available are safe. According to the National Academy of Sciences and the FDA, eating them poses no risk to your health.
- Many foods will now have to disclose that they contain “bioengineered” ingredients. The disclosure may be on the package or require going to a website or making a telephone call. The disclosure won’t tell you which ingredients are bioengineered.
- Disclosing “derived from” ingredients is voluntary. Oils, sugars, etc., made from bioengineered plants don’t have to be disclosed if no modified DNA remains in the ingredients, but a manufacturer may choose to do so.
- Restaurants, “very small” companies, most alcohol, and foods with meat, poultry, or eggs as a major ingredient aren’t required to disclose bioengineered ingredients. The disclosures are required on supplements.
USDA's List of Bioengineered Foods
Alfalfa |
Apple (Arctic varieties) |
Canola |
Corn |
Cotton |
Eggplant (BARI Bt Begun varieties) |
Papaya (ringspot virus-resistant varities) |
Pineapple (pink flesh varities) |
Potato |
Salmon (AquAdvantage) |
Soybean |
Squash (summer) |
Sugarbeet |
Understanding the New Bioengineered Disclosure - CSPI Newsroom
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