The G(e)nomes of Zurich: Civil Society Calls for
Urgent Controls on Synthetic Life

Follow Syn Bio meeting on ETC GroupâEURO(tm)s blog:
http://www.etcblog.org/
 
Scientists and industrialists in the controversial new
field of synthetic biology (building life-forms from
scratch) are meeting in Zurich, Switzerland this week
amidst claims that the worldâEURO(tm)s first entirely
human-made organism may be only weeks away from
creation. Swiss and international civil society groups
are calling for swift action to control this
technology but the scientists themselves are advancing
pre-emptive proposals to evade regulation. As
scientists meet in Zurich, the UKâEURO(tm)s Royal Society
and the Swiss government announce plans to investigate
synthetic biology.
 
Synthetic Biology 3.0
An international scientific congress, Synthetic
Biology 3.0, is meeting in Zurich from 24-27 June to
discuss the latest advances in Synthetic Biology âEURO"
the new field of extreme genetic engineering that
attempts to build synthetic life forms. Synthetic
biologists contend that all the parts of life can be
made synthetically (that is, by chemistry) and then
engineered together in the laboratory to produce
âEUROOEliving machinesâEURO  âEURO" fully working organisms
programmed for particular tasks. Some are being
designed for intentional environmental release. Today
there are about a dozen synthetic biology companies
worldwide plus almost 70 commercial âEURO~gene
foundriesâEURO(tm) that manufacture designer DNA molecules
for industrial use. The first commercial products
using synthetic biology (e.g., a textile fiber by
DuPont) are about to enter the market and there are
concerns that dangerous pathogens, such as smallpox or
Ebola virus, could now be constructed as bioweapons.
Because synthetic biology goes far beyond the genetic
engineering techniques previously used to develop
genetically modified food and drugs, no laws have yet
been developed that address its safety, security and
societal risks.
 
âEUROOEOnce more a new technology is storming ahead with
no government or international body able to regulate
or control it,âEURO  says biologist Florianne Koechlin
from SAG (the Swiss Working Group on Gene Technology).
âEUROOEOnce more we hear from the scientific community,
supported by industry and the military, that they have
life under control and will soon be able to construct
it. But life is more than the sum of its parts.âEURO 
Koechlin is a member of the Swiss government-appointed
ethics body that will investigate the implications of
synthetic biology later this year.
 
Synthetic Biology 3.Ownership?
The task of framing new laws became more urgent
earlier this month when ETC Group, an international
civil society organisation, uncovered the first-ever
patent application on a fully synthetic life form
produced via synthetic biology. US patent application
no. 20070122826, entitled âEUROOEMinimal bacterial
genome,âEURO  claims monopoly ownership of a
âEUROOEfree-living organism that can grow and replicateâEURO 
whose genome (full genetic information) has been built
entirely through mechanical means. Craig Venter, whose
scientific institute filed the patent application, has
since told Business Week that his team is only weeks
or months away from having built such a synthetic
organism, dubbed Mycoplasma laboratorium (nicknamed
âEURO~SynthiaâEURO(tm) by ETC Group).[i] If they succeed it
will mark a break with evolution as we know it.
 
Craig Venter himself has a long history of mixing
cutting-edge science with commercial exploitation. He
led the private part of the human genome-sequencing
project, selling human genetic data to pharmaceutical
companies as he went. Once again he has announced that
he hopes to cash in on a new science, boasting that
his new synthetic creation could be the first
trillion-dollar organism.[ii] Just last week he inked
an investment deal with oil company BP that brought
the commercial value of his start-up company,
Synthetic Genomics, Inc., to US$300 million.[iii]
Civil society critics are concerned that, using broad
patents, Venter may carve out a monopoly position as
the âEURO~MicrobesoftâEURO(tm) of synthetic biology.
 
âEUROOEIn the last year synthetic biologists have really
climbed into bed with big business,âEURO  explains Jim
Thomas of the ETC Group. âEUROOEWith BP, Cargill and
DuPont setting their sights on synbio, the corporate
agenda is starting to drive this powerful technology.
Society should be concerned about whose interests will
get ignored or even trampled on.âEURO 
 
Synthetic biology 3.oh no here we go again...
A year ago (at Synthetic Biology 2.0 in Berkeley,
California) scientists attempted to advance a plan for
self-governance of the field, seen by critics as a
ruse to head off future regulation. Those plans were
quietly dropped after 38 civil society organisations
signed an open letter calling on the scientists to
abandon the scheme and pursue a wider, more inclusive
dialogue with society. No such dialogue has been
forthcoming. This year the same proposals have largely
been repackaged, and published in the June issue of
Nature Biotechnology.[iv] The recycled governance
proposal, authored by members of a new trade body, The
International Consortium for Polynucleotide Synthesis,
along with scientist-entrepreneurs and employees of
the US FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), focuses
exclusively on biowarfare concerns. It presents a
framework where the industry body shares best
practices and screening software to identify synthetic
DNA that could be of interest to bioterrorists. In
addition, the authors recommend a requirement that all
buyers of synthesized DNA reveal their name, home
institution and offer any biosafety information
relevant to the sequences they are ordering. The
authors feel satisfied that this âEUROOEpath forwardâEURO  is
sufficient to top-up existing biosafety laws. Critics
disagree.
 
âEUROOEOf the proposed frameworkâEURO(tm)s fourteen authors, all
but four [who are FBI employees] declared competing
financial interests. We believe the authorsâEURO(tm) own
investment in the success of the technology cannot
help but overwhelm their capacity for
self-criticism,âEURO  argues Kathy Jo Wetter of ETC
Group. âEUROOEIt is bad enough that this new industry is
already claiming exclusive ownership on artificial
life forms; they should not be allowed to make up
artificial governance frameworks, too.âEURO 
 
 
For more information:
Jim Thomas, ETC Group [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
available in Zurich on +1 514 5165759 (mobile)
 



       
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