1 october
TRADE WAR LOOMS AS EUROPE REJECTS US
COMPLAINTS ON GM LABELLING
The European Commission (EC) has rejected
complaints from the UnitedStates
administration over its plans to tighten
rules on the labelling of genetically
modified (GM) food and animal feeds. The US
has indicated that the move is illegal under
WTO ules saying it will restrict trade and
will be costly to US business.
Friends of the Earth has obtained European
Commission documents responding to complaints
to the WTO from the US - and several other
countries. The Commission defends its
proposals and says it will push forward with
plans to trace and label GM foods and animal
feeds. The proposals are due to be agreed by
the Council of Agricultural Ministers on 14th
to 16th October and the Council of
Environment Ministers on October 17th in
Luxembourg.
The US complained that establishing a
tougher labelling and traceability regime for
GM foods in Europe would be “more trade
restrictive than necessary”, and should not
include animal feeds (even though most GM
crops are fed to farm animals). The US was
also upset that EU Member States had the
final say on the approval of new GM food and
crops, rather than scientists. This, says the
US, leaves“substantial room for political
interference” and “individual member states
will continue to be able to hold the approval
process hostage to political concerns.”
The Commission rejected all these claims.
It stated that “since there is solid,
cumulatively very strong evidence that
European consumers are interested to know
whether their food is derived from
genetically modified organisms, it is totally
justified for labeling to provide them with
this information as well.“
The Commission has also rejected calls for
a controversial "GM-Free" label - a proposal
supported by the UK Government and the
biotech industry. The Commission said this
would confuse people, and that consumers’
wanted to know what was in their food - not
what was absent.
Geert Ritsema of Friends of the Earth
Europe said:
"The United States Administration wants to
remove the right of European consumers to say
no to GM food. If it succeeds in preventing
GM food from being labelled it will become
almost impossible to avoid it. The European
Commission has rightly rejected US
complaints. Ministers must now go further by
tightening GM labelling rules when they meet
in Luxembourg later this month. Consumers
must come before the biotech interests of the
United States Government.”
Contact:
Adrian Bebb, GM Campaigner
(UK) 0113 389 9952 : 07712 843 211
(mobile)
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