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1.New WTO challenge called for
2.WTO plays God over transgenics

For more on the ASA - see item 1 - and its close relationship with Monsanto and other biotechs: http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=10

EXCERPT: "U.S. farmers and food companies are losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year in lost sales due to the EU's trade-restrictive and non-science based biotech labeling and tracing rules," Metz concluded. "We believe the time has come for the United States Government to mount a WTO-challenge against these rules." (item 1)
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1.ASA Calls EU Traceability & Labeling Review a Whitewash
PRESS RELEASE, 15 MAY 2006

http://www.soyatech.com/bluebook/news/viewarticle.ldml?a=20060515-3

Saint Louis, Missouri... On behalf of its 25,000 U.S. soybean producer-members, the American Soybean Association (ASA) is outraged by the conclusions adopted today by the European Commission on the trade impact European Union (EU) Traceability & Labeling laws for biotechnology-derived products have had on exports of U.S. agricultural products.

"The EU's biotech labeling and tracing rules have had a significant negative effect on U.S. exports of food and agricultural products to the EU," said ASA President Bob Metz, a soybean producer from West Browns Valley, S.D. "For the report to say that the rules have had a positive effect by providing relevant information, consumer choice and safety guarantees is nothing short of a whitewash and a betrayal of the very consumers the EU claims to care about. We are amazed that the Commission would write such fiction when market realities and trade numbers tell a very different story."

The EU first implemented mandatory labeling regulations in 1997, requiring foods that contain biotech ingredients to be labeled. Because EU consumers perceive biotech labels as health warnings, European food companies and dozens of major food manufacturers outside Europe who market their products in the EU, choose to reformulate their products or find new, non-U.S. sources of supply in order to avoid labeling their products as biotech.

For example, because soybean oil must be labeled, despite the fact that no detectable DNA from a biotech soybean is in the oil, EU processors moved away from U.S. soybeans. As a result, the value of U.S. exports of soybeans and soybean products fell by 65 percent between 1997, when the first biotech labeling rules for food went into effect, and 2004, from $2.5 billion to $874 million. Total U.S. exports of products falling within the scope of the EU regulations have dropped from $4.2 billion in 1996 to $1.6 billion in 2004.

"Most EU food companies have expressed their confidence in the safety of biotechnology," Metz said. "Nevertheless, they have made clear that they are doing everything possible to avoid having to put a biotech label on their products."

"The cost of complying with labeling and traceability rules drives up prices and makes U.S. producers of corn, soybeans and processed products less competitive," Metz said. "Unlike conventional trade barriers, labeling requirements rarely stop products at the border. Rather, they affect demand for imported products by causing food companies and feed compounders to reformulate their products or seek new sources of supply, and retailers to switch to food products that do not contain biotech ingredients."

The effect is even more evident when individual product categories are examined. Comparing U.S. exports to the EU between 1997 and 2004 for nine categories of processed products shows that exports of the five categories of products that are unlikely to contain biotech ingredients increased by an average of 46 percent over the period, while exports of the four categories most likely to contain biotech ingredients decreased by an average of 36 percent.

"U.S. farmers and food companies are losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year in lost sales due to the EU's trade-restrictive and non-science based biotech labeling and tracing rules," Metz concluded. "We believe the time has come for the United States Government to mount a WTO-challenge against these rules. Doing so would expose them for what they are - discriminatory trade barriers that have nothing to do with health or safety and that have actually decreased consumer choice."

For more information about the impact the EU Traceability & Labeling laws have had on exports of U.S. agricultural products, see ASA's T&L Trade Effects Paper available at: www.soygrower.com/eutl/.

For more information contact:
Bob Metz, ASA President, 605/880-1552, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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2.WTO plays God over transgenics
ASHOK B SHARMA
Financial Express, May 15, 2006
http://www.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=127073

The WTO dispute settlement body's (DSB) final verdict on Europe’s de facto moratorium on genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and food comes at a time when India is busy finalising its labeling norms on GMOs.

The nature of the verdict suggests that it has more of political implications, rather than scientific, on countries enforcing norms and regulations on GMOs. The panel had given its interim verdict in February this year. The verdict was conveyed to the concerned parties, and was not made public. Similar is the case with the final verdict which was, however,leaked out to the media last week.

According to reports, the panel has made few cosmetic changes over the 1,000 odd pages of its interim verdict. The global trade body not acting transparent on such a vital issue of health and environmental concerns raises doubts about its credibility and competence.

On May 13, 2003 the US, alongwith Canada, Argentina and Egypt, filed a complaint in the WTO against the EU's de facto moratorium on GMOs. A three member panel was set up on March 4, 2004, with Christian Haeberli in the chair and Mohan Kumar from India and Akio Shimizo of Japan as members to adjudicate the dispute. The DSB of the WTO took about 3 year to give its verdict. Usually the DSB takes six months to give its interim verdict, and another six months to give its final verdict.

Why did the DSB take such a long time to deliver its verdict? Was it busy deliberating on scientific aspects of health and environment safety? The answer is ‘No’.

The DSB knows that it is not competent to deliberate on these issues. It only said that the EU moratorium then in vogue led to "undue delay" in 24 out of 27 contested GM crop approval process. The EU had lifted its moratorium on May 19, 2004 by approving Bt 11 maize, without any clear mandate from the member states.

As the European moratorium is no longer in force, the ruling of the DSB has little relevance and is of historical value. But what is more worrying is that the DSB, basing its verdict on the sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) norms, said the bans imposed on GM crops by member states are not justified.

The SPS norms used in global trade are not adequate enough to address the health and environmental concerns relating to GM crops. The global standards body, Codex Alimentarius Commission, is yet to come out with a clear stance on the safety of GM food. In such a situation, it would have been better for the DSB to ask and allow member countries to put in place relevant scientific and regulatory processes to ensure safety of GM crops and food.

The DSB had the option to take a decision on the basis of the relevant provisions of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety. It did not do so, even though these are globally ratified and enforced treaties.

The Cartegena Protocol clearly says, "Lack of scientific certainty due to insufficient knowledge regarding the extent of the potential adverse effects of a living modified organism on conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity in the Party of import, taking also into account risks to human health, shall not prevent that Party from taking a decision, as appropriate, with regard to the import of the living modified organisms in question.....to avoid or minimise such potential adverse effects."

Whatever, the European Commission may say, the member states are going ahead with imposing ban on GM crops, acting on public concerns and scientific evidence.

The DSB verdict is open to appeal. Therefore the verdict at this stage cannot have its impact on stringent regulatory process, which member countries might like to impose. It is true athat the US may use its arm-twisting tactics on many developing countries to slacken their regulatory process, as it is interested in saving its biotech industry from a whopping loss of $300 million a year. It did use such tactics when Egypt withdrew from the GMO disputes and when Sri Lanka was about to adopt a moratorium on GMOs.