St. Louis, Missouri
September 8, 2008
The American Soybean
Association (ASA) is pleased to learn that LibertyLink®
soybeans (A2704-12) from
Bayer CropScience
have received final approval from the European Commission for
importation into the European Union (EU) for food and feed use.
This will allow the commercial launch of LibertyLink soybeans in
the U.S. for the 2009 planting season.
"It has been more than 10 years since the EU approved a
biotech-enhanced soybean variety for importation," said American
Soybean Association (ASA) First Vice President Johnny Dodson, a
soybean producer from Halls, Tenn., who chairs ASA’s Biotech
Working Group. "We welcome the approval of LibertyLink soybeans
and hope this approval will lead to a new era of timely,
science-based EU reviews for biotech-enhanced seed products."
The approval provides U.S. soybean producers with market access
to nearly half a billion consumers living in the 27 EU member
states of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic,
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary,
Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta,
Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia,
Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Most importantly, it
provides livestock and poultry producers in these countries with
access to high quality U.S. soybeans and soybean meal.
"Since Bayer’s LibertyLink soybean technology is tolerant to
glufosinate instead of glyphosate, farmers will have an
additional in-crop weed control option," Dodson said. "Being
able to alternate herbicides provides an effective management
tool to minimize the selection for herbicide resistant weeds,
which will enhance the sustainability of U.S. soybean
production."
Back in July 2008, the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture also
granted a safety certificate for LibertyLink® soybeans, which
clears the way for imports of the soybeans into China, the
largest importer of U.S. soybeans. LibertyLink soybeans are
fully approved for food, feed and cultivation in the United
States and Canada, and for importation and/or cultivation in
Argentina, Australia, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Russia, South
Africa and Taiwan.
"U.S. growers look forward to this and several other new
biotech-enhanced soybean varieties now under development that
will offer important benefits to consumers, growers, and the
environment, ranging from healthy oil profiles to increased
yields to better weed control," Dodson said. "ASA and Bayer have
worked in partnership to educate foreign buyers on biotechnology
and for regulatory clearance of Bayer’s LibertyLink soybean."
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