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Great Lakes
Article:
New Government Fish Tests Raise
Mercury Concerns
Environmental Working Group
12/10/03
New Food and Drug Administration (FDA) data show mercury
contamination of fish is more serious than federal scientists
previously assumed. Tests on mercury in fish found that
four species - canned albacore tuna, grouper, sea bass
and bluefish - have higher average mercury levels than
historic data used by the FDA in developing its mercury
health advisory, according to analysis by the Environmental
Working Group. EWG obtained the data through the Freedom
of Information Act.
The EWG review shows that mercury levels in popular canned
albacore tuna are of particular concern, challenging FDA's
stance that fetuses face no risk if their mothers consume
it. Canned albacore, known as white tuna, had mercury
levels twice as high as past FDA estimates for canned
tuna, and three times the levels in light tuna (see Figure
1).
These findings confirm the results of recent independent
tests of canned albacore tuna showing that a small but
significant percentage (2 to 5 percent) of albacore tuna
tested exceeds the FDA action level for mercury of 1 part
per million. Previous FDA studies have found albacore
tuna with mercury levels over 1 part per million. Fish
with mercury levels above 1 part per million have traditionally
been included on the FDA do not eat list for pregnant
women. In the data release by FDA to EWG, maximum mercury
levels in canned albacore tuna were just shy of the 1
part per million limit.
Mercury is toxic to the developing brain and nervous
system. Elevated exposures during fetal development can
have long lasting adverse effects on intelligence, speech,
and motor development. According to the Centers for Disease
Control, 8 percent of U.S. women of childbearing age have
levels of mercury in their blood that presents developmental
risks for their babies. EWG has advocated that the FDA
give strong, clear advice to pregnant women on fish consumption,
and that the federal government cut mercury pollution
from coal-burning power plants and other sources to eventually
make tuna "baby safe."
Other fish were even more contaminated, but like canned
albacore, they were not added to the FDA's new proposed
list of fish that pregnant women should avoid. Grouper,
in particular, had extremely high levels of mercury. Two
out of 20 samples of grouper (10 percent) exceeded the
FDA action level for mercury of 1 part per million. Average
grouper levels were 30 percent higher than previous FDA
data indicated.
News of these high mercury levels in popular fish species
comes in the midst of two important government public
health developments. Just a week ago, the Bush Administration
proposed a major rollback of the mercury pollution reduction
goals adopted by the Clinton EPA, which will result in
much higher levels of mercury pollution over a more prolonged
period, increasing the risk of fish contamination. This
week, the FDA's independent Food Advisory Committee will
review an agency draft warning telling consumers how to
protect themselves from mercury in seafood. The proposed
warning does not encourage pregnant women to limit or
avoid consumption of canned albacore.
The new fish test data were generated by FDA as part
of a revision of the agency's mercury in seafood advisory
- revisions that were requested by the Food Advisory Committee
in the summer of 2002, following EWG reports that the
agency had downplayed the risk of mercury in canned tuna.
The Committee's request for revisions to FDA's advice
reflects increasing concern among scientists about high
levels of mercury in the blood of American women, and
their conclusion that the FDA's current advice does not
provide adequate protection to the American public from
the health hazards of mercury.
FDA's current mercury advisory recommends that pregnant
women and women of childbearing age not eat any swordfish,
shark, king mackerel, or tilefish. The proposed revisions
to the advisory do not add any fish to the "do not
eat" list, but in developing its proposed revisions,
FDA did test tilefish for mercury, a species added to
the advisory in 2001.
In spite of its status as one of just four fish that
FDA recommends women of childbearing age completely avoid,
tilefish was not the most contaminated fish in this latest
round of mercury testing.
FDA's new test results show that five fish--canned albacore
tuna, grouper, sea trout, orange roughy and bluefish--have
higher levels of mercury than tilefish (see Figure 3).
Yet in spite of the elevated levels of mercury in canned
albacore tuna and these other fish, the FDA's new health
advisory provides no advice to women that they limit consumption
of these heavily contaminated fish.
In July 2002, the Food Advisory Committee asked the FDA
to significantly increase testing of fish so that the
agency could more confidently advise women of childbearing
age on the fish they should avoid, the fish they should
eat in moderation, and the fish they should eat freely.
The FDA devoted most of its resources to testing canned
tuna, the one species for which the agency already had
data sufficient to support warning pregnant women to significantly
reduce consumption.
For nine of the top ten most commonly eaten seafood products,
the FDA conducted no new tests for mercury at all. As
a result, the agency has as many samples of canned tuna
as it does for all other seafood in the top ten combined.
The FDA reports mercury test results for just 6 clams
and 8 samples of tilapia, the 8th and 9th most popular
types of seafood in the US.
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