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Ethics debates on food technologies in the EU

Publication date: 31/07/2013

Food is essential for human life and existence. Therefore production of food sufficient to feed the global population in a manner that is sustainable both now and for future generations is essential. For centuries agricultural production was conducted utilising ecologically sustainable agricultural processes. This model still operates in a number of developing countries (in for example, SE Asia, South America and sub-Saharan Africa), but in most of the developed world, there was a move to a productivist model of intensive farming, during the 20th century.

The objective of intensified agriculture is increased levels of production, specialisation and expansion through the use of convergent application of biotechnology (including genetics), nanotechnology and information technology.  Lowe et al  have defined productivism as “a commitment to an intensive, industrially driven and expansionist agriculture with state support based primarily on output and increased productivity”. The consequent environmental damage caused by intensive farming methods has led to the emergence of an alternative, a post-productivist model with the focus shifting from intensive farming to shorter food supply chains, better added value for farmers and more sustainable, environmentally friendly, localised and pluralistic agricultural practices.

Whereas the key stakeholders in the productivist model tend to be farmers, the food industry and policy makers, the stakeholder community of the post-productivist model is much wider and includes in addition to producers, distributers and policy makers, local rural and urban communities, environmentalists, consumers, NGOs, special interest groups and
others, with less emphasis on commodity production, and a greater focus on shorter less intense farming, reducing environmental damage, animal welfare and a shift towards
sustainable agriculture and conservation or restoration of valued landscapes and habitats. An important manifestation of this approach has been a change in consumer awareness, behaviour and engagement with the whole of the food chain from “gate to plate” with particular emphasis on perceptions of risk, precaution, “naturalness” and animal welfare, driven to a not inconsiderable extent by a number of high profile health scares particularly across the European market. This has resulted in the development of new market relationships with a consumer driven focus.

At the same time the productivist approach to food production has been moving towards a more agri-industrial model. This industrial model of agriculture depends on further increasing specialisation and homogeneous production, with production control and pricing shifting from primary producers (farmers) to highly competitive industrial distributors and highly industrialised multinational chemical, biological and pharmaceutical companies implementing global value chains. This results in a squeeze on the prices paid to farmers by distributors and an increasing pressure for a more intensive production dependent on external inputs of water and energy together with patented, product specific, fertilizer and pesticides and increasingly, the use of scientific research to modify, control and maintain reproduction of crops and animals.

In recent years Europe has been the focus of a number of high profile food-related issues or concerns which have had a significant impact on consumer confidence and which have
resulted in large changes to the European regulatory structure with important consequences for the development, regulation, economics and politics of the agri-industry.

One consequence of these events has been a huge loss of confidence by consumers in the food industry and also in food regulators, and this has been accompanied by strong
consumer demand for much greater consultation and input into all stages of the food chain and its regulation. These high levels of consumer sensitivity and much tighter coordinated regulation as a result of loss of consumer trust, has been an important factor in increasing support for the post-productivist model of food and agriculture in Europe.

This is in stark contrast to the situation which exists in the US, where food and agriculture are regulated by the FDA, a body more remote from the US consumer. Much has been written about the confidence and trust of the American consumer in national institutional arrangements and it has proved much easier in such an environment to introduce innovations such as products and processes based on GM technology, which has been much more problematic in Europe.

As a result the US still remains much closer to the agri-industrial model. These two agri-food production models now contend in the policy and economic fields for a dominant role in food production and supply to consumers. Both approaches are dependent on continuous scientific innovation in order to develop and maintain competitive advantage.

While to some extent the consumer is over a barrel as they are dependent on what is available, i.e. what is provided by producers and distributers, they do have the ability to “vote with their feet” and can and do reject products in which they have little or no confidence. Therefore failure to recognise and respond to consumer preferences and concerns may generate consumer protest and shifting of loyalties to different production systems. Hence the acceptance and trust of the consumer is important for economic viability and it is essential for both models to be able to secure positive attitudes in consumer perceptions of risk and ethical values in relation to methods of production, processing, packaging and distribution. Effective regulation is a key element in securing consumer trust and hence confidence in both products and processes.

This report from Global Ethics in Science and Technology (GEST) considers these two agri-food models in relation to innovation, risk and power and control issues together with the associated ethical issues and consumer perceptions.

Resource type: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)

Late lessons from early warnings: science, precaution, innovation (vol 2)

Publication date: 22/01/2013

The 2013 Late Lessons From Early Warnings report is the second of its type produced by the European Environment Agency (EEA) in collaboration with a broad range of external authors and peer reviewers.

The case studies across both volumes of Late Lessons From Early Warnings cover a diverse range of chemical and technological innovations, and highlight a number of systemic problems.

The ‘Late Lessons Project’ illustrates how damaging and costly the misuse or neglect of the precautionary principle can be, using case studies and a synthesis of the lessons to be learned and applied to maximising innovations whilst minimising harms.

Resource type: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)

Democratising biotechnology?: Deliberation, participation and social regulation in a neo-liberal world

Publication date: 23/04/2010

There is now significant policy and academic interest in the governance of science and technology for sustainable development. In recent years this has come to include a growing emphasis on issues of public understanding of science and innovative processes of deliberative and inclusive policy-making around controversial technologies such as nuclear power and agricultural biotechnology. Concern with such issues coincides with rising levels of interest in deliberative democracy and its relationship to the structures and processes of global governance. This article connects these two areas through a critical examination of ‘global’ deliberations about agricultural biotechnology and its risks and benefits.

It draws on an extensive survey concerned with the diverse ways in which a range of governments are interpreting and implementing their commitments under the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety regarding public participation and consultation in order to assess the potential to create forms of deliberation through these means. The article explores both the limitations
of public deliberation within global governance institutions as well as of projects whose aim is to impose participation from above through international law by advocating model
approaches and policy ‘tool kits’ that are insensitive to vast differences between countries in terms of capacity, resources and political culture.

Resource type: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)

Governing innovation: the social contract and the democratic imagination

Publication date: 31/05/2009

Innovation occurs in a world of inequality which it may ameliorate or exacerbate. The best hope for steering innovation toward positive ends is that it should respond to people’s self-determined needs and aspirations, provided that certain background conditions of information and deliberation are met. In short: good innovation demands good democracy; and, especially in times of change, good democracy demands an expansive, energetic, constitutive role for law.

Regrettably, global innovations in science and technology over the last few decades have not kept pace with innovations in our imagination of democracy itself. Three tried and true systems of governance brought to bear on innovation – the market, regulation, and ethics – are all associated with models of democratic participation, but each is flawed in its techniques of representation: representing the range of public views; representing all affected parties; representing people at times when they can influence innovation; and, not least, representing the very nature of the actors who need to be represented.

In wrestling with these difficulties, makers of science and technology policy have propagated two strikingly different images of the human subject. One, tacitly built into the market and regulatory frameworks, is of citizens as capable of knowing and rationally processing information. The other, born out of frustration with public resistance to new technologies, is of ignorant and helpless publics, held back from reason not only by lack of information but by systematic cognitive biases. To some degree, the removal of value debates to ethics committees rests on and reinforces this reductionist view of popular incompetence.

For citizens in the emerging global order, this state of affairs calls for reclaiming the turf of democracy by reasserting who should be served by innovation and for what purposes. I have suggested that the resources of the law can be mobilized from the bottom up, to support constitutional imaginations that are at once more human and more humane than those that emerge from the alliance of science and technology with the state. Contracts, even virtual ones like the contract between science and society, need law to enforce them. Innovative publics around the world may look to the law to reinsert themselves into a social contract from which they have been strangely excluded.

Resource type: article: Web Page

Taking European knowledge society seriously

Publication date: 06/07/2007

This report is the product of an expert working group acting under mandate from the European Commission Directorate General for Research (DG RTD), including contributions from specialists in science and technology studies, policy analysis, sociology, philosophy and law, as well as participants from civil society organizations.

The report looks at the causes and implications of widely-recognised European public unease with science and science-based technologies. It asks how we might at the same time further EU commitments to enhance democratic civil society in Europe, as well as address urgent challenges for science and technology policy, for science and governance, including those of climate and sustainability. Individual chapters deal with innovation policy, the regulation of risk institutionalised approaches to ethics, and modes of learning in complex environments, as well as efforts to engage European publics in the governance of science.

A final conceptual chapter draws these themes together by analysing the role of overarching ‘imaginaries’ in shaping practices and perspectives in all these areas. In conclusion, the report advances a number of salient messages for policy makers and sixteen specific recommendations for policy improvement. In sum, the authors call for new forms of experiment in both governance and science, moving beyond conventional linear understandings and engaging afresh with the rich diversity of European public life. Only in this way, the authors argue, will European policy take ‘knowledge society’ seriously -and fulfil its abundant promise.

Link takes you to an online document with the option to download.

Resource type: Web page URL

Engineering animals: ethical issues and deliberative institutions

Publication date: 07/03/2007

Many public discussions about cloned and genetically engineered (GE) food animals have focused on questions of the regulatory authorities that may govern such animals, but few have considered the impacts of ethical or moral concerns. While ethical issues can be equally as or even more important than safety and regulatory issues to many people, there is currently no established venue where these issues can be fully addressed.

Representatives from federal agencies, biotech companies, food companies, consumer groups, animal welfare organizations, agricultural groups, non-U.S. regulatory agencies and universities gathered in October 2006 to consider what options are available for continuing discussions regarding the moral and ethical aspects of genetically engineering and cloning food animals and how those discussions might shape the future development and commercialization of such animals.

This report is the synthesis of that meeting.

Resource type: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)

Late lessons from early warnings: the precautionary principle 1896-2000 (vol 1)

Publication date: 09/01/2002

Late lessons from early warnings is about the gathering of information on the hazards of human economic activities and its use in taking action to better protect both the environment and the health of the species and ecosystems that are dependent on it, and then living with the consequences.

The report is based on case studies. The authors of the case studies, all experts in their particular field of environmental, occupational and consumer hazards, were asked to identify the dates of early warnings, to analyse how this information was used, or not used, in reducing hazards, and to describe the resulting costs, benefits and lessons for the future.

 

Resource type: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)