March 22, 2005
Today the
European Commission took
stock of the EU legislative framework on Genetically Modified
Organisms (GMOs). During the debate, the Commission confirmed
its full confidence in the existing regulatory framework on
GMOs, one of the strictest in the world, which provides for a
high level of scientific assessment and at the same time
safeguards the consumers’ right to choose. The Commission
concluded that it would continue to comply fully with its legal
obligations and proceed with the approval of pending
authorisations as appropriate. While continuing to fulfil the
responsibilities imposed on it by the EU legislative framework,
the Commission has reflected on the need to develop consensus
between all interested parties.
Over the past four years, the
EU has put in place a stringent system to regulate genetically
modified food, feed and crops. The authorisation procedure under
this new system ensures that only GMOs which are safe for human
and animal consumption and for release into the environment can
be placed on the European market. Clear labelling rules allow
farmers, other users and consumers to choose whether or not to
purchase such products.
Individual authorisations are
granted following scientific evaluation on a case by case basis.
Requests for authorisations which do not fulfil all criteria
have been and will continue to be rejected.
The Commission will fulfil its
responsibilities in the establishment of labelling thresholds
and, on the implementation of co-existence measures, it will
reflect on possible further steps on the basis of a report to be
finalised by the end of this year concerning the experience
gained in the Member States.
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS on the
regulations of GMOs in the European Community
What are GMOs?
Genetic modification, also
known as "genetic engineering” or “recombinant-DNA technology”
was first applied in the 1970’s. It is one of the newest methods
to introduce novel traits to æmicro-organisms, plants and
animals. Unlike other genetic improvement methods, the
application of this technology is strictly regulated. A
genetically modified organism (GMO) or a GM food or feed product
can only be put on the market in the EU after it has been
authorised on the basis of a detailed procedure. This procedure
is based on a scientific assessment of the risks to health and
the environment.
Genetically modified organisms
(GMOs) can be defined as organisms in which the genetic material
(DNA) has been altered in a way that does not occur naturally by
mating or natural recombination. As an application of modern
biotechnology, this technique allows selected individual genes
to be transferred from one organism into another, also between
non-related species.
The most common types of GMOs
that have been developed and commercialised are genetically
modified crop plant species, such as genetically modified maize,
soybean, oil-seed rape and cotton varieties. Such varieties
have, in the main, been genetically modified to provide
resistance to certain insect pests and tolerance to total
herbicides.
The development of insect
resistant plants (such as cotton Bt) reduces the use of harmful
insecticides needed to control certain insect pests in the crop.
Use of plants tolerant to a specific broad-spectrum herbicide
allows this herbicide to be used to remove a range of weed
species in the crop without destroying the genetically modified
plants themselves. This type of herbicide reduces the need for a
greater number of spray treatments with specific herbicides that
only destroy a single or a few weed species.
There are other types of GMOs
which have direct implications on the characteristics of
foodstuffs. For example, by introducing a particular gene into a
plant, fruit with delayed ripening is currently being developed.
Animals such as fish (example: salmon) can be genetically
modified to enhance their quality and accentuate certain
characteristics (such as their resistance to cold). Genetically
modified microorganisms, which are living microscopic entities,
are used in the production of numerous vitamins, flavourings and
additives.
Overview of EU legislation
on GMOs
EU legislation on GMOs has been
in place since the early 1990s. This specific legislation has
two main objectives:
- to protect human health
and the environment and
- to ensure the free
movement of safe genetically modified products in the
European Union.
The entire corpus of GMO
legislation has recently been amended, leading to the creation
of a new legal framework. Its main legal instruments are as
follows:
Directive 2001/18/EC on the
deliberate release into the environment of GMOs[1]
applies to two types of activities:
- the experimental release
of GMOs into the environment, i.e. the introduction of GMOs
into the environment for experimental purposes (for example
in connection with field tests);
- the placing on the market
of GMOs, for example the cultivation, importation or
transformation of GMOs into industrial products.
The placing on the market of
GMO food and feed or food and feed products containing or
consisting of GMOs is regulated by Regulation (EC) No
1829/2003 on genetically modified food and feed.
Intentional and
unintentional movements of GMOs between Member States of the
European Union and third countries are regulated by
Regulation (EC) No 1946/2003 on transboundary movements of
genetically modified organisms, with the exception of
intentional movements within the Community.
Directive 90/219/EEC, as
amended by Directive 98/81/EC, on the contained use of
genetically modified microorganisms (GMMs). This Directive
regulates research and industrial work activities involving GMMs
(such as genetically modified viruses or bacteria) under
conditions of containment, i.e. in a closed environment in which
contact with the population and the environment is avoided. This
includes work activities in laboratories.
Labelling and traceability
requirements are laid down in Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003
and Regulation (EC) No 1830/2003 concerning the traceability and
labelling of genetically modified organisms and the traceability
of food and feed products produced from genetically modified
organisms and amending Directive 2001/18/EC.
Release into the environment
The release of a GMO into the
environment means an introduction of the GMO into the
environment, without any precise confinement measure being taken
to restrict the contact between this GMO and the population or
the environment in general. Such a release may be carried out
for experimental purposes or in connection with the placing on
the market of a GMO.
Experimental releases of
GMOs into the environment are mainly carried out for the
purposes of study, research, demonstration and development of
novel varieties. The behaviour of the GMO in an open environment
and its interactions with other organisms and the environment
are studied. The experimental releases are subject to the
provisions of Part B of Directive 2001/18/EC.
If the results of the
experimental release are positive, the company may decide to
place the GMO on the market, i.e. make it available to third
parties either free of charge or for a fee. The GMO may be
placed on the market for purposes of cultivation, importation,
or transformation into different products. The placing on the
market of a GMO is mainly governed by the provisions of Part C
of Directive 2001/18/EC.
What are the principles
introduced by Directive 2001/18/EC?
Directive 2001/18/EC
introduces:
- principles for
environmental risk assessment (see below);
- mandatory post-market
monitoring requirements, including on long-term effects
associated with the interaction with other GMOs and the
environment;
- mandatory information to
the public;
- a requirement for Member
States to ensure labelling and traceability at all stages of
the placing on the market, a Community system for which is
provided for by Regulation 1830/2003 on traceability (see
below);
- information to allow the
identification and detection of GMOs to facilitate
post-market inspection and control;
- first approvals for the
release of GMOs to be limited to a maximum of ten years;
- the consultation of the
Scientific Committee(s)/European Food Safety Authority
(EFSA) to be obligatory;
- an obligation to consult
the European Parliament on decisions to authorise the
release of GMOs and
- the possibility for the
Council of Ministers to adopt or reject a Commission
proposal for authorisation of a GMO by qualified majority.
What is the procedure for
authorising the placing on the market of GMOs as such or as a
component in products?
Under Directive 2001/18/EC, a
company intending to market a GMO must first obtain a written
authorisation to this end. The GMO placed on the market will be
defined as a "product consisting of a GMO" (such as GM
carnations of modified colour) or a "product containing a GMO"
(such as a batch containing a mixture of seeds).
The authorisation procedure for
placing the GMO on the market involves all Member States. This
can explained by the fact that the authorisation of the placing
on the market of a GMO implies the free movement of the
authorised products throughout the territory of the European
Union. Hence all Member States are concerned.
The application (called
"notification") is first submitted to the competent national
authority of an EU Member State. The notification must include a
full evaluation of the environmental risks. Having received the
notification, the national authority must issue an opinion which
will take the form of an "assessment report".
This assessment report may be
favourable or unfavourable. In the event of an unfavourable
report, the company may submit a new notification for the same
GMO to the competent national authority of another Member State.
This authority may eventually issue a different report.
In the event of a favourable
opinion for the placing on the market of the GMO concerned, the
Member State, after having received the notification and
produced the assessment report, informs the other Member States
via the European Commission. The other Member States and the
Commission examine the assessment report and may issue
observations and objections.
If there are no objections by
other Member States or by the European Commission, the competent
authority that carried out the original assessment authorises
the placing on the market of the product. The authorised product
may then be placed on the market throughout the European Union
in conformity with any conditions set out in the authorisation.
The authorisation has a maximum duration of ten years and may be
renewed provided certain conditions are met (for example on the
basis of the results of the post-market monitoring programme).
If objections are raised, the
procedure provides for a conciliation phase among the Member
States, the Commission and the notifier. The objective of this
phase is to resolve the outstanding questions.
If at the end of the
conciliation phase the objections are maintained, a decision
must be taken at European level. The Commission first asks for
the opinion of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA),
composed of independent scientists, highly qualified in the
fields associated with medicine, nutrition, toxicology, biology,
chemistry and other similar disciplines.
The Commission then presents a
draft decision to the Regulatory Committee composed of
representatives of the Member States for an opinion. If the
Committee gives a favourable opinion by qualified majority, the
Commission adopts the decision.
If not, the draft Decision is
submitted to the Council of Ministers for adoption or rejection
by qualified majority. If the Council does not act within three
months, the Commission shall adopt the decision. During the
notification process, the public is also informed and has access
to the publicly available data on the Internet: at
http://gmoinfo.jrc.it for
example the summary notification format, the assessment reports
of the competent authorities, or the opinion of the European
Food Safety Authority (http://efsa.eu.int/).
What is the procedure for
authorisation of the experimental release of GMOs into
the environment?
A person or a company who
wishes to introduce GMOs into the environment for experimental
purposes must first obtain written authorisation from the
competent national authority of the Member State within whose
territory the experimental release is to take place. It is given
on the basis of an evaluation of the risks presented by the GMO
– or GMOs – for the environment and human health. Hence, the
authorisation procedure is simpler than the one referred to
above. It is a purely national procedure as it is only
applicable in the Member state where the notification was
submitted. However, the other Member States and the European
Commission may make observations to be examined by the competent
national authority.
How does the environmental
risk assessment procedure work?
The safety of GMOs in respect
to health and the environment depends on the characteristics of
the recipient organism (or parent organism), the inserted
genetic material, the final organism that is produced, the
recipient environment and the interaction between the GMO and
the environment. The objective of the environmental risk
assessment is to identify and evaluate potential adverse effects
of the GMO(s). These include direct or indirect, immediate or
delayed effects, taking into account any cumulative and long
term effects on human health and the environment which may
result from the deliberate release or placing on the market of
the GMO(s). The environmental risk assessment also requires
evaluation in terms of how the GMO was developed and examines
the potential risks associated with the new gene products
produced by the GMO (for example toxic or allergenic proteins),
and the possibility of gene-transfer (for example of antibiotic
resistance genes).
The risk assessment
methodology, reproduced in Annex II to Directive 2001/18/EC, is
as follows:
- identification of any
characteristics of the GMO(s) which may cause adverse
effects;
- evaluation of the
potential consequences of each adverse effect;
- evaluation of the
likelihood of the occurrence of each identified potential
adverse effect;
- estimation of the risk
posed by each identified characteristic of the GMO(s)
- application of management
strategies for risks resulting from the deliberate release
or placing on the market of GMO(s);
- determination of the
overall risk of the GMO(s).
Have GMOs already been
authorised for release into the environment?
Under the ‘deliberate release’
legislation (Directive 2001/18/EC and, previously, Directive
90/220/EC) numerous GMOs have been approved for different uses,
some for cultivation, some for import and processing, some as
feed and food (see Annex 1 and Annex 1B). Varieties of
agricultural products include maize, oil seed rape, soybean and
chicory. Numerous applications for the placing on the market of
GMOs for authorisation under Directive 2001/18/EC are pending,
e.g. maize, oil seed rape, cotton, rice (see Annex 2). Several
applications have a scope which is restricted to import and
processing, while some also include cultivation as a requested
use.
National safeguard measures
A number of Member States have
invoked the so-called 'safeguard clause' of the previous
Directive 90/220/EEC. This clause is also included in Directive
2001/18/EC, which replaces Directive 90/220/EEC. This clause
provides that where a Member State has justifiable reasons to
consider that a GMO, which has received written consent for
placing on the market, constitutes a risk to human health or the
environment, it may provisionally restrict or prohibit the use
and/or sale of that product on its territory.
The safeguard clause was
invoked on nine separate occasions under Directive 90/220/EEC,
three times by Austria, twice by France, and once each by
Germany, Luxembourg, Greece and the United Kingdom. The
scientific evidence provided by these Member States as
justification for their measures was submitted to the Scientific
Committee(s) of the European Union for opinion.
In all of these cases, the
Committee(s) deemed that there was no new evidence which would
justify overturning the original authorisation decision.
In spite of the repeal of
Directive 90/220/EEC, eight (8) of the nine (9) bans remain in
place (UK has withdrawn its ban) and have now to be considered
under the safeguard provision (Article 23) of Directive
2001/18/EC. In view of the new regulatory framework, the
Commission has examined the additional information provided by
certain Member States which have invoked the safeguard clause.
This additional information has also been reviewed by EFSA. The
Commission is currently preparing decisions asking Member States
to lift their bans.
In addition, in January 2005,
Hungary invoked the safeguard clause in order to prohibit the
cultivation of MON 810 maize in its territory. The Commission is
currently examining this case.
A list of pending safeguard
clauses is available in Annex 5.
GMOs for food and feed use
and genetically modified food and feed
Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003
applies to applications for the placing on the market – in the
territory of the European Union – of the following products:
- GMOs for food and feed use
- food and feed containing
GMOs, consisting of such organisms or produced from GMOs (in
the Regulation these are called: “genetically modified food”
and “genetically modified feed”).
The new Regulation replaces the
1997 Novel Foods Regulation (Regulation 258/97) which governed
the placing on the market of novel food, including GM food.
What are the principles of
Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003?
The Regulation says that the
products to which it applies must not:
- have adverse effects on
human health, animal health, or the environment;
- mislead the consumer or
user;
- differ from the food/feed
they are intended to replace to such an extent that their
normal consumption would be nutritionally disadvantageous
for human beings (and for animals in the case of genetically
modified feed).
- in the case of genetically
modified food and feed, harm or mislead the consumer by
impairing the distinctive features of the animal products.
The Regulation puts in place a
centralised, uniform and transparent EU procedure for all
applications for placing on the market, whether they concern the
GMO itself or the food and feed products derived therefrom.
This means that business
operators may file a single application for the GMO and all its
uses: a single risk assessment is performed and a single
authorisation is granted for a GMO and all its uses
(cultivation, importation, processing into food/feed or
industrial products). If one of these uses concerns food, all
the uses (cultivation, processing into industrial products,
etc.) may be treated under Regulation 1829/2003.
For a food product containing
GMOs or consisting of such organisms, the applicant has a
choice: he can either file his application exclusively under
Regulation 1829/2003 pursuant to the "one door, one key"
principle.
This would be in order to
obtain an authorisation for the deliberate release of a GMO into
the environment — in accordance with the criteria established by
Directive 2001/18/EC — and the authorisation to use this GMO in
food and feed — in accordance with the criteria established by
Regulation 1829/2003. Or he can choose to split the application,
and submit both under Directive 2001/18/EC and Regulation
1829/2003.
The Regulation also ensures
that experiences such as with Starlink maize in the US (a GM
maize which was only authorised for feed but was found in food)
are avoided because GMOs likely to be used as food and feed can
only be authorised for both uses.
What is the authorisation
procedure under Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003?
This authorisation, valid
throughout the EU, is granted subject to a single risk
assessment process under the responsibility of the European Food
Safety Authority and a single risk management process involving
the Commission and the Member States through a regulatory
committee procedure.
Regulation 1829/2003 lays down
a procedure for issuing authorisations for placing on the market
of genetically modified food and feed. In this procedure, the
Commission has an important role. Notably, it is up to the
Commission to adopt the final decision and grant or reject the
authorisation if the Committee, composed of representatives of
the Member States, and the Council have not managed to adopt the
decision by qualified majority within the time limit in
question.
Applications are submitted
first to the competent authority of the Member State where the
product is first to be marketed. The application must clearly
define the scope of the application, indicate which parts are
confidential and must include a monitoring plan, a labelling
proposal and a detection method. The national authority must
acknowledge receipt in writing within 14 days and inform EFSA.
The application and any supplementary information supplied by
the applicant must be made available to EFSA, which is
responsible for the scientific risk assessment covering both the
environmental risk and human and animal health safety
assessment. Its opinion will be made available to the public and
the public will have the opportunity to make comments.
In general a time limit of six
months for the EFSA opinion will be respected. This time limit
can be extended if EFSA has to request further information from
the applicant. A guidance document for the risk assessment of GM
plants and derived food and feed has been adopted by EFSA on the
24 of September and is available at the following URL. (http://www.efsa.eu.int/science/gmo/gmo_guidance/660_en.html)
Within three months of
receiving the opinion of EFSA, the Commission will draft a
proposal for granting or refusing authorisation. The Commission
may diverge from EFSA’s opinion, but it must then justify its
position. The Commission’s proposal must be approved through
qualified majority by the Member States within the Standing
Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health, composed of
representatives of the Member States.
If the Committee gives a
favourable opinion, the Commission adopts the Decision. If not,
or in the event of rejection of the Commission’s proposal by
qualified majority of the Committee, the draft Decision is
submitted to the Council of Ministers for adoption or rejection
by qualified majority.
If the Council does not act
within three months or does not obtain a qualified majority for
the adoption or rejection of the Commission’s proposal, the
Commission shall adopt the decision.
Products authorised shall be
entered into a public register of GM food and feed. (http://europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/authorisation/commun_register_en.htm)
Authorisations will be granted for a period of 10 years
subject where appropriate to a post-market monitoring plan.
Authorisations are renewable for 10-year periods.
Have GMOs already been
approved for use in food products?
Products from numerous GMOs can
legally be marketed in the EU. See Annex 3. These are in
particular:
- one GM soy and one GM
maize approved under Directive 90/220/EEC prior to the
entering into force of Regulation (EC) No 258/1997 on Novel
Foods.
- processed foods derived
inter alia from seven GM oilseed rape varieties, four GM
maize varieties and oil from two GM cottonseed varieties,
which have all been notified as substantially equivalent in
accordance with Article 5 of the Novel Foods Regulation.
- more recently, Bt 11 sweet
corn and NK603 maize were approved under the Novel Foods
Regulation on 19 May and 26 October 2004 respectively.
Further applications for the
placing on the market of GM food products have been introduced
under the Novel Foods Regulation and the new GM Food and Feed
Regulation 1829/2003. They are currently pending at different
stages in the authorisation procedure. This mainly concerns
products derived from GM maize, sugar beet and soybean. See
Annex 4.
Which genetically modified
feeds have been authorised?
Before the entry into force of
the Regulation on genetically modified food and feed, there was
no Community legislation governing feed derived from GMOs. Such
feeds were subject to Directive 90/220/EEC, and several GM feeds
were authorised under this Directive. These are chiefly maize
varieties, rape varieties and one soya variety.
On 19 July 2004, the import and
processing of NK 603 maize was authorised under Directive
2001/18 on the deliberate release of GMOs into the environment.
This authorisation covers the use of NK 603 as feed. See Annex
1B.
A series of other
authorisations of GMOs, including their use as feed, are
pending. See Annex 3.
What are the current rules
on genetically modified varieties and seeds?
EU legislation on seeds,
notably Directives 2002/53/EC and 2002/55/EC concern the
marketing of seed of varieties of agricultural plant and
vegetable species. They specify that national authorities that
have agreed to use seed of a certain variety on their territory
must notify the acceptance of the variety to the Commission.
Varieties may be included in national catalogues only if they
meet defined Community criteria as regards distinctness,
uniformity, stability and in the case of agricultural species
value for cultivation and use.
The seed legislation
furthermore requires that GM varieties have to be authorised in
accordance with EU GMO legislation, in particular with Directive
2001/18/EEC before they are included in the Common Catalogue and
marketed in the EU. If the seed is intended for use in food, it
also has to be authorised in accordance with the GM food and
feed Regulation.
The Commission examines whether
the information supplied by the Member State as regards
inclusion in a national list is in compliance with Community
legislation. If so, it includes the variety concerned in the
Common Catalogue of Varieties which means the seed of such a
variety can be marketed throughout the EU. So far, 17 GM
varieties derived from MON 810 maize are inscribed in the common
catalogue.
Labelling and traceability
of GMOs
Why does the EU have
specific rules on traceability of GMOs?
Traceability provides the means
to trace products through the production and distribution
chains. The general objectives are to facilitate:
- control and verification
of labelling claims;
- targeted monitoring of
potential effects on health and the environment, where
appropriate;
- withdrawal of products
that contain or consist of GMOs where an unforeseen risk to
human health or the environment is established.
How does traceability work
in practice?
Traceability can be defined as
the ability to trace products through the production and
distribution line. For example, if a genetically modified seed
constitutes the raw material of a food product, the company
selling the seed would have to inform any purchaser that it is
genetically modified, together with more specific information
allowing the specific GMO to be precisely identified. The
company is also obliged to keep a register of business operators
who have bought the seed.
Equally the farmer would have
to inform any purchaser of the harvest that it is genetically
modified and keep a register of operators to whom he has made
the harvest available.
What are the rules on
traceability of GMOs?
The Labelling and Traceability
Regulation (Regulation 1830/2003) covers all GMOs that have
received EU authorisation for their placing on the market. That
is all products, including food and feed, containing or
consisting of GMOs. Examples include seeds which have been
genetically modified and bulk quantities or shipments of whole
GM grain, e.g. soybean and maize. The Regulation also covers
food and feed that are derived from a GMO. This includes for
instance tomato paste and ketchup produced from a genetically
modified tomato or flour produced from a genetically modified
maize.
The traceability rules oblige
the operators concerned, i.e. all persons who place a product on
the market or receive a product placed on the market within the
EU, to be able to identify their supplier and the companies to
which the products have been supplied.
The traceability requirement
varies depending on whether the product consists of or contains
GMOs (Article 4) or has been produced from GMOs (Article 5).
- In the case of a product
consisting of or containing GMOs: Operators must transmit in
writing to the operator receiving the product:
- an indication that the
product – or some of its ingredients – contains or consists
of GMOs or is produced from GMOs and
- the unique identifier(s)
assigned to those GMOs, in the case of products containing
or consisting of GMOs.
- In the case of products
produced from GMOs: Operators must transmit in writing to
the operator receiving the product:
- an indication of each of
the food ingredients which are produced from GMOs;
- an indication of each of
the feed materials or additives which are produced from
GMOs;
- in the case of products
for which no list of ingredients exists, an indication that
the product is produced from GMOs.
In both cases operators must
hold the information for a period of five years from each
transaction and be able to identify the operator by whom and to
whom the products have been made available. Each operator must
keep records and make the information available to the public
authorities on demand.
Transmission and record-keeping
of this information will reduce the need for sampling and
testing of products.
What are the rules on
labelling of GMO products?
Besides traceability
requirements, Regulation 1830/2003 also sets out labelling
requirements for GM products. Labelling informs the consumer and
user of the product, hence allowing them to make an informed
choice.
Generally speaking, for
all pre-packaged products consisting of or containing GMOs,
Regulation 1830/2003 requires that operators indicate on a
label: “This product contains genetically modified organisms” or
“This product contains genetically modified [(name of
organism(s)]”. For non pre-packaged products offered to the
final consumer or to mass caterers (restaurants, hospitals,
canteens and similar caterers) these words must appear on, or in
connection with, the display of the product.
In particular as regards
genetically modified food and feed, Regulation 1829/2003
lays down specific labelling requirements. Genetically modified
foods which are delivered as such to the final consumer or mass
caterers (restaurants, hospitals, canteens and similar caterers)
must be labelled, regardless of whether DNA or proteins derived
from genetic modification are contained in the final product or
not. The labelling requirement also includes highly refined
products, such as oil obtained from genetically modified maize.
The same rules apply to animal
feed, including any compound feed that contains transgenic soya.
Corn gluten feed produced from transgenic maize must also be
labelled, so as to provide livestock farmers with accurate
information on the composition and properties of feed.
Therefore, genetically modified
food and feed are subject to the specific labelling requirements
imposed by the GMO legislation. However, besides these specific
labelling requirements, genetically modified food is subject to
the labelling requirements of the general legislation in this
area[2].
Exemption from the
traceability and labelling requirements
Conventional products, i.e.
products created without recourse to genetic modification, may
be accidentally contaminated by GMOs during harvesting, storage,
transport or processing. This does not only apply to GMOs. In
the production of food, feed and seed, it is practically
impossible to achieve products that are 100% pure. Taking this
into account, the legislation has set limits above which
conventional food and feed must be labelled as products
consisting of GMOs, containing GMOs or produced from GMOs.
These conventional products
“contaminated” by authorised GMOs are not however subject to
traceability and labelling requirements if they contain traces
of these GMOs below a limit of 0.9%, provided the presence of
this material is adventitious or technically unavoidable. This
is the case when operators demonstrate to the competent
authorities that they have taken adequate measures to avoid the
presence of this material.
Will the meat or milk of an
animal fed with GM feed also be labelled as genetically
modified?
In line with the general EU
rules on labelling, Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003 does not
require labelling of products such as meat, milk or eggs
obtained from animals fed with genetically modified feed or
treated with genetically modified medicinal products. Nor are
these products subject to traceability requirements.
Why do the new Regulations
allow the presence of traces of GM materials which have received
a favourable scientific assessment, but which are not yet
formally approved?
The adventitious or technically
unavoidable presence of GM material in products placed on the
market in the European Union can occur during cultivation,
handling, storage and transport. This situation already exists
and affects products originating both in the EU and third
countries.
Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003
acknowledges this and defines the specific conditions under
which a technically unavoidable presence of GMOs not yet
formally authorised could be permitted.
A number of GMOs have already
been assessed by the Scientific Committees advising the European
Commission. These committees have indicated that the GMOs do not
pose a danger to the environment and health, but their final
approval is still pending. The rules allow the presence of these
GMOs in a food or feed up to a maximum of 0.5%, below which
labelling and traceability will not be enforced. Above 0.5% it
is prohibited to put the product on the market.
The Regulation limits the
application of this threshold to three years (until 2007) and
provides that a detection method must be publicly available.
The Commission has published a list of GM material which has not
been authorised but which has had a favourable scientific
assessment. This list may be consulted at the following address:
http://www.europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/gmfood/events_en.pdf
This exemption aims to solve
the problem faced by operators who have tried to avoid using
GMOs, but find that their products contain a low percentage of
GM material due to accidental or technically unavoidable
contamination.
What scientific support does
the EU provide relating to the use of GMOs?
The Commission's in-house
research centre (Joint Research Centre - JRC) provides
scientific support for EU legislation on traceability and
cultivation & consumption of GMOs. It is responsible for
collating all summary notification of deliberate field crop
trials in the EU, updating the database and providing public
access to this information. JRC is undertaking research on
underlying mechanisms for integrating foreign genes into host
plants, and evaluating their long-term stability. It also
undertakes research to better understand the composition of
foods with minimal amounts of GMOs, and to develop methods to
detect and quantify the presence of GMOs in raw materials,
ingredients and final products. The JRC also coordinates the
European Network of GMO Laboratories, which brings together more
than 45 EU control laboratories to discuss important issues and
share information and methods for sampling, detection,
identification, and quantification of GMOs.
Co-existence
What are the rules on
co-existence between transgenic crops and traditional or organic
crops?
The cultivation of GM crops
will have implications for the organisation of agricultural
productions. Pollen flow between adjacent fields is a natural
phenomenon. Because of the labelling requirements for GM food
and feed, this may have economic implications for farmers who
want to produce traditional plants intended for food.
Co-existence is about giving
farmers the practical choice between conventional, organic and
GM crop production in compliance with the legal obligations for
labelling and purity standards.
On 5 March 2003, the Commission agreed that it should be up to
the Member States to develop and implement management measures
concerning co-existence, in accordance with the subsidiarity
principle. On 23 July 2003 the Commission adopted a
Recommendation (2003/556/EC) on guidelines for the development
of national strategies and best practices to ensure the
co-existence of genetically modified crops with conventional and
organic farming.
(http://europa.eu.int/comm/agriculture/publi/reports/coexistence2/guide_en.pdf)
The guidelines state that
approaches to co-existence need to be developed in a transparent
way, based on technical guidelines and in co-operation with all
stakeholders concerned. The guidelines are based on experiences
with existing segregation practices (e.g. in certified seed
production); at the same time they ensure an equitable balance
between the interests of farmers of all production types.
Further, they state that
management measures to ensure co-existence should be efficient
and cost-effective, without going beyond what is necessary to
comply with EU threshold levels for GMO labelling. They should
be specific to different types of crop, since the probability of
admixture varies greatly from one crop to another; while for
some crops the probability is high (e.g. oilseed rape) for
others the probability is fairly low (e.g. potatoes). In
addition, local and regional aspects should be fully taken into
account.
Farmers should be able to
choose the production type they prefer, without forcing them to
change patterns already established in the area. As a general
principle, during the phase of introduction of a new production
type in a region, farmers who introduce the new production type
should bear the responsibility of implementing the actions
necessary to limit admixture.
Continuous monitoring and
evaluation and the timely sharing of best practices are
indicated as imperatives for improving the measures adopted.
Priority should be given to
farm-level management measures and to measures aimed at
co-ordination between neighbouring farms. If it can be
demonstrated that these measures can not ensure co-existence,
regional measures could be considered (e.g. restriction on the
cultivation of a certain type of GMO in a region). Such measures
should apply only to specific crops whose cultivation would be
incompatible with ensuring co-existence in the region, and their
geographical scale should be limited as possible. Region-wide
measures should be justified for each crop and type (e.g. seed
and crop production separately).
The international
environment
Are the new rules in line
with international trade rules?
The new rules take account of
the EU's international trade commitments and of the requirements
of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, specifically as regards
the obligations on importers of products in the EU and the
obligations on exporters of products to third countries. The
EU's regulatory system for authorizing GMOs is in line with WTO
rules: it is clear, transparent and non-discriminatory.
What are the rules governing
the movement and international trade of GMOs?
The EU is a party to the
Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety annexed to the UNEP’s Convention
on Biological Diversity. It entered into force on 11 September
2003. The overall purpose of this United Nations agreement is to
establish common rules to be followed in transboundary movements
of GMOs in order to ensure, on a global scale, the protection of
biodiversity and of human health.
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety is incorporated into EU
legislation through a wide range of legislation governing the
use of GMOs within the European Union. The cornerstone of this
legal framework is Directive 2001/18/EC on the deliberate
release into the environment of genetically modified organisms.
It is supplemented by the Regulation on the transboundary
movements of GMOs, which was adopted in June 2003:
(http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/pri/en/oj/dat/2003/l_287/l_28720031105en00010010.pdf)
The main features of the
Regulation are:
- the obligation to notify
exports of GMOs intended for deliberate release into the
environment and secure express consent prior to a first
transboundary movement;
- the obligation to provide
information to the public and to our international partners
on EU practices, legislation and decisions on GMOs, as well
as on accidental releases of GMOs;
- a set of rules for the
export of GMOs intended to be used as food, feed or for
processing;
provisions for identifying GMOs
for export.
Annex
- GMO Products approved
under Directive 90/220/EEC as of March 2001
See
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/biotechnology/authorised_prod_1.htm
- GMO products authorised
under Directive 2001/18/EC as of 15 March 2005
See
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/biotechnology/authorised_prod_2.htm
- GMO products – pending
notifications under Directive 2001/18/EC as of 15 March 2005
See
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/biotechnology/pending_products.htm
- Genetically modified
(GM) Foods and Feeds authorised in the European Union
For genetically modified (GM)
food authorised in the EU under the Novel Food Regulation (EC)
No. 258/97 see:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/authorisation/258-97-ec_authorised_en.pdf
For GMOs authorised for feed use in the EU in accordance with
Directives 90/220/EEC and 2001/18/EC see:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/authorisation/2001-18-ec_authorised_en.pdfFor
applications for authorisation of genetically modified (GM)
foods submitted under the Novel Food Regulation (EC) No. 258/97
see:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/authorisation/258-97-ec_pending_authos_en.pdf
For feed consisting of or containing GMOs notified under
Directive 2001/18/EEC pending authorisation in the EU see:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/food/food/biotechnology/authorisation/2001-18-ec_pending_authos_en.pdf
For applications for authorisation of genetically modified food
and feed submitted under Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003 on
genetically modified food and feed see:
http://www.efsa.eu.int/science/gmo/gm_ff_applications/catindex_en.html
- GMO Products invocation
of Article 16 under Directive 90/220/EEC and Article 23 of
Directive 2001/18/EC
See
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/biotechnology/safeguard_clauses.htm
[1] GMOs from now on
being defined as a product containing GMOs or consisting of such
organisms
[2] cf. in particular
Directive 2000/13/EC on the approximation of the laws of the
Member States relating to the labelling, presentation and
advertising of foodstuffs; see also Directive 96/25/EC on the
circulation of feed materials, amending Directives 70/524/EEC,
74/63/EEC, 82/471/EEC and 93/74/EEC and repealing Directive
77/101/EEC |