Toronto, Canada
June 12, 2002
The
Biotechnology Industry Organization's Industrial and
Environmental Section has approved a resolution calling for the
inclusion of biotechnology as part of any strategy or agreement
that emerges from an upcoming United Nations summit on
sustainable development. Representatives of the section
discussed the resolution at a press conference held this morning
during the BIO 2002 convention.
The United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development is
slated for Aug. 26 - Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, South Africa. The
summit comes 10 years after the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro, which produced Agenda 21 urging the reconciling of
human activities with natural resources under the rubric of
sustainable development.
"Today, sustainable development may actually be within our grasp
because industrial biotechnology, alongside agricultural
applications, is providing innovative methods for achieving it,"
said Brent Erickson, BIO's vice president for industrial and
environmental biotechnology. "We believe it is vital for
government agencies around the globe to recognize the positive
role industrial biotechnology can play in economic development
and environmental protection that may well help all nations move
toward a more sustainable future."
Industrial biotechnology offers tools to help nations shift from
petroleum-based economies to renewable carbohydrate-based
economies. In fact, researchers are already using advanced
genomics and proteomics to make ethanol fuel and biodegradable
plastic from corn sugars and soybeans."
The Biotechnology Industry
Organization (BIO) represents more than 1,000 biotechnology
companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers
and related organizations in all 50 U.S. states and 33 other
nations. BIO members are involved in the research and
development of health-care, agricultural, industrial and
environmental biotechnology products.
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