US military agency invests $100m in genetic extinction technologies | Science | The Guardian

Jay OwenEarth Systems Science, Nature/Biomimicry

“Ethical Markets is alarmed to see such investments in potentially disastrous technologies before the necessary assessments of their possible social and environmental consequences. We need to reinstate the former US Office of Technology Assessment, on which I served, which conducted such studies from 1975 until it was shut down in 1996 in a short-sighted effort by that Congress to “slay the messenger”.   ~Hazel Henderson, Editor”

US military agency invests $100m in genetic extinction technologies

Technology could be used to wipe out malaria carrying mosquitos or other pests but UN experts say fears over possible military uses and unintended consequences strengthen case for a ban

A US military agency is investing $100m in genetic extinction technologies that could wipe out malarial mosquitoes, invasive rodents or other species, emails released under freedom of information rules show.

The documents suggest that the US’s secretive Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) has become the world’s largest funder of “gene drive” research and will raise tensions ahead of a UN expert committee meeting in Montreal beginning on Tuesday.

The UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is debating whether to impose a moratorium on the gene research next year and several southern countries fear a possible military application.

UN diplomats confirmed that the new email release would worsen the “bad name” of gene drives in some circles. “Many countries [will] have concerns when this technology comes from Darpa, a US military science agency,” one said.

The use of genetic extinction technologies in bioweapons is the stuff of nightmares, but known research is focused entirely on pest control and eradication.