U.S. Soy Exports to Resume after European Commission
Votes to Approve Syngenta’s Biotech Corn
The European Commission today voted to approve
Syngenta’s Agrisure – MIR604 biotech-enhanced corn. This action should
allow soybean and soybean meal trade to resume after traces of this
and other corn events (which were approved last month by Commission)
were found in U.S. soybean meal shipments earlier this summer. While
the Commission’s action is welcome news and allows U.S. soy trade to
resume, an intermediate and long-term fix to the European Union’s (EU)
zero-tolerance policy, and slow and politically-influenced approval
process, is still needed.
The American Soybean Association (ASA) has urged the
European Commission to find a workable and commercially viable
solution to the EU’s zero tolerance for the low level presence of
EU-unapproved biotech events. European livestock and feed industries,
along with U.S. growers, all have been advocating for a workable
solution due to the EU’s slow and politically-influenced biotech
approval process that results in European biotech reviews and
approvals taking over twice as long as science-based reviews and
approvals in the rest of the world, including the United States.
ASA and European feed and livestock industries believe
a partial practical solution to this problem is for the EU to permit
the low level presence of a biotech trait that has undergone
regulatory review and received safety clearances in the country of
export. The other part of the solution is for the EU to greatly
improve the timeliness of its approval system and ensure that its
approval process is wholly science-based.
The EU is the fourth largest export market for U.S.
soybeans, representing sales of more than $1 billion in 2007. To avoid
disruption of trade and resulting negative impacts on EU livestock
production, ASA is advocating practical and sensible tolerance level
solutions be found to ensure that there are no unwarranted barriers to
trade.