December 8, 2003
Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology News Summary
Associated Press
A divided
European Union failed to agree on lifting its 5-year-old
moratorium on new biotech foods, dragging out a dispute that
Washington charges violates world trade rules and contributes to
starvation in Africa, reports AP.
A committee of national experts split 6-6 with three abstentions
on allowing the sale of canned sweet corn from a strain
developed by the Swiss-based Syngenta company.
Spain,
Britain,
Netherlands, Finland, Sweden and Ireland were in favor; Denmark,
Greece, Luxembourg, Austria, Portugal and France against; and
Germany, Italy and Belgium abstained.
The lack of a decision means the application will be kicked up
to EU ministers, probably in January, said EU spokeswoman Beate
Gminder. If the ministers don't make a decision in 90 days, the
EU's head office -- which made the proposal to approve the corn
-- has the final word.
"We feel that all the conditions have been met," Gminder said.
"We do have clear labeling, we do have clear specific rules
agreed."
The proposal was the first to be considered since EU governments
enacted strict labeling and traceability rules for products with
genetically modified ingredients last summer, according to AP.
The European Commission has sought to reassure the United States
that the new rules, which take effect in April, would bring an
end to the de facto moratorium imposed in 1998 amid public fears
about long-term environmental and health effects of
biotechnology.
But the Bush administration, charging the EU ban is unscientific
and hurts American exporters, started legal action in August at
the World Trade Organization to get it lifted.
Biotech crops, including corn and soybeans genetically modified
to resist insects or specific weed-killers, have been widely
grown for years in the United States.
U.S. President George W. Bush has also argued that the ban keeps
African nations from planting genetically modified crops -- even
though such crops have higher yields -- out of fear of losing
European markets.
Environmental groups in Europe, which has suffered through mad
cow disease and other deadly food scares in recent years, called
on the Commission to resist U.S. pressure, says AP.
"The public doesn't want to eat (genetically modified) foods and
question marks remain over its safety," said Geert Ritsema of
Friends of the Earth. "The Commission must put the well-being of
European citizens and their environment before the business
interests of the U.S. government and the biotech industry."
Diplomats said the Commission refused a request to delay a vote
on the proposal, which was first presented in November, leading
to the three abstentions because ministries involved had not yet
agreed on a position on Syngenta's corn, which is known as Bt11.
Another corn -- U.S.-based Monsanto's Roundup Ready -- was given
a clean bill of health last week by the European Food Safety
Authority for use as food or feed and could be submitted to the
national experts for a vote in February or March, Gminder said.
Such moves are intended to demonstrate the ban is being lifted
before the WTO panels begin hearing the complaints from the
United States, Canada and Argentina. No WTO ruling is expected
before next summer at the earliest, reports AP. |