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News and comment on genetically modified foods and their associated pesticides    
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GENE EDITING MYTHS, RISKS, & RESOURCES

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EU Keeps 'Zero Tolerance' Policy On Biotech Imports For Now

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Published: 20 October 2008
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NOTE: Looks like all the industry scaremongering on this has failed, for now at least. The reality is that if they had to label meat, eggs and dairy products from animals reared on GM feed, the market for GM animal feed would be dead over night. It's only consumer deception that allows it to continue.
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EU Keeps 'Zero Tolerance' Policy On Biotech Imports For Now
By Matthew Dalton
Dow Jones Newswires, October 20 2008
http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djhighlights/200810200534DOWJONESDJONLINE000159.htm

BRUSSELS - The European Union for now will keep its "zero tolerance" policy on allowing the presence of unapproved varieties of genetically modified plants in imported food and animal feed, a spokeswoman for the European Commission said Monday.

Biotech companies, farmers and feed importers sought a change to the policy because of concerns that imports with trace amounts of unapproved biotech plants would be blocked from the E.U. The concern is particularly acute for soybeans: the E.U. imports about 75% of its supply, and they form a crucial source of protein in the diet of Europe's livestock.

The E.U. is making progress toward approving new plant varieties for import, said commission health spokeswoman Nina Papdoulaki, citing the clearance of a biotech corn and soybean in the last seven months. The commission also sent a biotech soybean - Roundup Ready 2, developed by Monsanto Co. (MON) - to the European Council for approval, putting it on track for final import clearance by next year's harvest in the fall.

"We believe with the authorization of these products, there won't be any need for a (policy change), at least for the time being," Papadoulaki said.

The commission will continue to monitor the situation and may decide that a change to the "zero tolerance" policy is in fact necessary, she added.

The E.U. approves genetically modified plants at a slower rate than the U.S. The difference has already stopped corn exports to the E.U. from the U.S., because the risk of contaminating normal corn shipments with biotech varieties not approved for import in the E.U. is too great.

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