Strasbourg, France
December 2, 2003
As part of the
ongoing debate on the difficulties of separating genetically
modified organisms (GMOs) from conventional organisms in food
and animal feed, the Agriculture Committee of the
European Parliament
adopted today a highly contested own-initiative report on
coexistence between GMOs and conventional crops. In general
terms, MEPs are demanding stricter and more effective protection
for organic and conventional farmers against accidental
contamination of their crops and seeds. They highlight the need
for EU common regulations on coexistence (instead of leaving the
issue under subsidiarity rules, as the Commission suggested
recently) and argue that GMO producers should have some kind of
civil liability for any contamination of organic and
conventional products. Efforts by some EPP-ED members to soften
the tone of the report and allow more freedom to farmers
producing genetically modified crops were rejected.
The
Agriculture Committee also rejected proposals by some MEPs that
subsidiarity should apply to legislation on coexistence and
called instead "for rules to be established without delay at
Community level on the coexistence of genetically modified crops
and non-genetically modified crops". MEPs also asked for the
European Parliament to be included in this process under the
codecision procedure. The resolution adds that Member States
should have the free choice to restrict GMO cultivation in
certain geographical areas if they wish.
GMOs in seed
production
A new EU
directive of June 2003 introduced a tolerance level of 0.9% of
accidental GMOs in conventional crops. Should this threshold be
exceeded, the producer will have to indicate it on the product
label. MEPs support this measure but also share one of the main
concerns among farmers: the potential presence of minute traces
of GMOs in conventional seeds, which makes it practically
impossible today to achieve 100% non-genetically modified crops.
The European Commission has recently drafted guidelines
suggesting a tolerance level for the adventitious presence of
GMOs in seeds (between 0.3% and 0.7%, depending on the type of
seed). In the text adopted today, the Members say that a limit
value for the labelling of GMO impurities in seed should be set
and they "call on the Commission to stipulate the labelling of
GMOs in seed at the technically reliable detection threshold".
The rapporteur Friedrich-Wilhelm GRAEFE zu BARINGDORF
(Greens/EFA, D) - an organic farmer himself - had suggested a
threshold limit of 0.1%, in order to "guarantee the purity" of
the seeds but he presented an oral amendment at the last minute
to delete this percentage from the text, due to the lack of
consensus among MEPs. No other threshold limit in seeds has been
suggested.
Civil
liability
MEPs also urge
the Commission to bring forward "a proposal on Community-wide
civil liability and insurance in respect of possible financial
damage in connection with coexistence". Another recommendation
adopted by the committee "calls on the Commission and the Member
States to include workable and legally enforceable civil
liability provisions for sufficient insurance cover on the part
of the applicant as a component of the authorisation procedure
for placing GMOs on the market, so that claims by persons
affected can be dealt with adequately and quickly in the event
of damage".
02.12.2003 Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development
In the chair: Joseph DAUL (EPP-ED, F)
Procedure: Own-initiative
Plenary vote: January, Strasbourg |