EU to approve Bayer
GM soy imports next week
By Jeremy Smith
Source: Thomson Reuters
September 4, 2008
CheckBiotech
The rubber-stamp
approval, permitted under EU law when ministers from the bloc's 27 countries
fail to agree after a certain time, will be valid for a standard 10 years and
be granted by the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, on September 8,
they said.
Bayer's soybean, developed to resist glufosinate
herbicides, is known by its codename A2704-12 and will be imported into EU
markets either as whole soybeans, oil or meal, and then be processed by
European companies for use in food and animal feed.
Its EU authorization does not permit cultivation in
The draft approval, obtained by Reuters, refers to the
"placing on the market of foods, food ingredients and feed containing,
consisting or produced by A2704-12 soybean".
The soybean is of particular interest to
The approval, which follows on from an inconclusive debate
by EU farm ministers in July, may also allow the Commission to avoid proposing
a controversial ceiling for amounts of unauthorized GM material tolerated in
imports, officials say.
ZERO TOLERANCE
After a tortuous debate in May on how to push biotech policy
forward and end years of deadlock between EU countries, the Commission said it
would look at finding a "technical solution" to end the EU
zero-tolerance policy on unauthorized GM products.
While the EU has approved a string of GM products - mainly
maize types - by default rubber-stamps since 2004, it does not permit the
presence of any other GMO on EU territory, even in tiny amounts, until the EU
approval for that product is granted.
For major GM crop-growing countries such as the
Allowing imports of Bayer's GM soybean, along with a few
pending GM maize applications, should help achieve the aim of raising supply of
raw material for animal feed, officials say.
It might also allow the Commission to avoid embarking on a
legal proposal to allow unauthorized GM material into
EU countries rarely agree on GM issues and discussions on
authorizing imports of new GM products usually end in deadlock.
The EU's zero tolerance of unauthorized GM material has been
a major headache for feedmakers and livestock
producers.
Soy, an ideal high-protein raw material for feed, mainly
enters Europe from
Since these countries mainly grow GM varieties, non-biotech
soy is becoming increasingly difficult to source.
Source: Thomson Reuters
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