Brussels
– The development of EU-wide legislation on the co-existence of genetically
modified crops with conventional and organic farming does not appear justified
at this time, in view of the EU’s limited experience with the cultivation
of GM crops and the need to conclude the process of introducing national measures.
This is the main conclusion of a new report from the European Commission,
published today. However, before any decision is taken, the Commission will
engage in an in-depth consultative process with stakeholders. A conference
in Vienna on 5-6 April will provide an ideal occasion for such a discussion.
Co-existence measures are the subject of a Commission Recommendation from
July 2003. They are designed to ensure that GM crops can be grown along with
non-GM crops without negative economic consequences caused by accidental mixing
of the two. The Commission proposes to work jointly with the Member States
and stakeholders on the development of recommendations for crop-specific technical
segregation measures.
“The development of efficient and cost-effective strategies to ensure
co-existence is vital to ensure a practical choice between GM and non-GM produce
for farmers and consumers,” said Mariann Fischer Boel, Commissioner
for Agriculture and Rural Development. “This is not a question of health
or environmental protection, because no GMOs are allowed on the EU market
unless they have been proved to be completely safe. To ensure that consumers
know exactly what they are buying the EU has developed an advanced labelling
and traceability system for GMOs. Segregation measures must be in place to
ensure that accidental traces of GMOs in conventional or organic products
are kept within the strict ranges defined by EU legislation. Growing conditions
are very varied from country to country and experience with GM crops is still
limited in Europe. It therefore does not seem appropriate to propose unified
EU rules at this time.”
Experience with the cultivation of GM crops remains extremely limited in the
EU. Commercial cultivation has so far been limited to two types of GM maize.
In Spain, GM maize cultivation amounted to 58,000 hectares in 2004, or about
12 percent of total Spanish maize cultivation. In other Member States, cultivation
is limited to a few hundred hectares. In Spain, GM maize has been grown since
1998 under a non-binding code of good practice.
On 23 July 2003, the Commission adopted a Recommendation on guidelines for
the development of national strategies and best practices, to help Member
States develop national legislative or other strategies for co-existence.
Most Member States are still developing national approaches, with specific
co-existence legislation adopted in four Member States (Germany, Denmark,
Portugal and six of the Austrian Länder) by the end of 2005. Monitoring
programmes still have to be set up and implemented in order to verify the
effectiveness and economic feasibility of the measures taken.
Co-existence measures aim at protecting farmers of non-GM crops from the possible
economic consequences of accidental mixing of crops with GMOs. The Commission
Recommendation states that co-existence measures should not go beyond what
is necessary to ensure that accidental traces of GMOs in non-GM products stay
below EU labelling thresholds in order to avoid any unnecessary burden for
the operators concerned. Measures should be science-based and proportionate
and must not generally forbid the growing of GM crops.
Most Member States have based their approaches on management measures applicable
at the level of individual farms or in coordination between neighbouring farms.
The onus of implementing segregation measures has generally been placed on
GM crop growers. The very diverse nature of EU farming means that co-existence
measures have to be adapted to local conditions and crop types, and make it
imperative to ensure the maximum degree of flexibility for the Member States
in developing their national approaches.
The Commission believes there is a need to gather further experience before
departing from the current subsidiarity-based approach set out in the 2003
Recommendation. However, it intends to take very careful notice of the opinions
expressed by stakeholders. The co-existence conference organised in Vienna
on 5-6 April 2006 will provide such an occasion. In the meantime, the Commission
proposes to strengthen its efforts to ensure the maximum cooperation between
Member States; analyse the latest scientific and economic information available
on segregation measures; develop jointly with the Member States best practices
for technical segregation measures leading to crop-specific recommendations;
and obtain more information on national civil liability systems. In 2008,
the Commission will report on the progress made, including an update on the
development and implementation of national co-existence measures.
Source:
Commission reports on national measures to ensure co-existence of genetically
modified crops with conventional and organic farming. Europa (10th March,
2006) (http://europa.eu.int/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/06/293&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en)
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