Farms.com Home   News

Advancements Through Gene Editing Offer Potential to Lower Food Costs

Jan 25, 2023
By Bruce Cochrane.

The Agri-Food Innovation and Sustainability Enhancement Chair with the University of Saskatchewan is confident genetic improvements accomplished through gene editing will contribute to lower food prices in Canada.
"Ethics, Regulators and the Public" was discussed as part of a Swine Innovation Porc panel discussion on gene editing, held in conjunction with the 2023 Banff Pork Seminar.
Dr. Stuart Smyth, an associate professor and the Agrifood Innovation and Sustainability Enhancement Chair with the University of Saskatchewan, says gene editing offers to increase the innovative capacity of food production and hopefully contribute to keeping food prices a little bit lower in Canada.

Audio Clip- Dr. Stuart Smyth-University of Saskatchewan:
I think that the major hurdle is going to be, will the regulatory system treat gene edited livestock as equivalent to conventional livestock?
If that doesn’t occur, then it's going to increase the amount of time it takes to get new livestock through any type of a regulatory system.

One of the challenges that we have in Canada is we don't currently have a regulatory system for gene edited livestock so having to develop that system from scratch would be a significant time requirement and there's no evidence so far that the risk is there to justify the development of such a system.
I think that the main thing to look at would be, are there any changes at the genetic level that would be different from any other breeding technique that's being used in any aspect of agriculture?

If the risk of using of gene editing to change a gene is no different than other targeted breeding technologies, the science is indicating that the risk from any of those potential varieties or resulting offspring would be as safe as any other technology.


Trending Video

Pandemic Risks in Swine - Dr. John Deen

Video: Pandemic Risks in Swine - Dr. John Deen

I’m Phil Hord, and I’m excited to kick off my first episode as host on The Swine it Podcast Show. It’s a privilege to begin this journey with you. In this episode, Dr. John Deen, a retired Distinguished Global Professor Emeritus from the University of Minnesota, explains how pandemic threats continue to shape U.S. swine health and production. He discusses vulnerabilities in diagnostics, movement control, and national preparedness while drawing lessons from ASF, avian influenza, and field-level epidemiology. Listen now on all major platforms.

"Pandemic events in swine systems continue to generate significant challenges because early signals often resemble common conditions, creating delays that increase spread and economic disruption."