I had thought that concerns about this were probably mostly unfounded, with very little chance of anything bad happening as a result of genetic engineering on plants. It's basically just accelerated evolution anyway, right?
Then I read about Klebsiella planticola. A single simple modification, just an extra gene, was made to it. There were good reasons for it and the resulting organism would be very useful. It was tested, shown to not result in anything dangerous to humans and the company that developed it was ready to go commercial with it.
Then someone realised it would kill all plant life on Earth.
That fact was missed in the testing process, because it was only concerned with testing for direct harm to humans.
A little worrying, no?
Then I read about Klebsiella planticola. A single simple modification, just an extra gene, was made to it. There were good reasons for it and the resulting organism would be very useful. It was tested, shown to not result in anything dangerous to humans and the company that developed it was ready to go commercial with it.
Then someone realised it would kill all plant life on Earth.
That fact was missed in the testing process, because it was only concerned with testing for direct harm to humans.
A little worrying, no?
.