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ASA Urges USTR to Challenge EU Traceability and
Labeling Requirements
November 25, 2003... Saint Louis, Missouri... The
American Soybean Association (ASA), a trade group representing 25,000
U.S. soybean farmers, and other agricultural and food groups today
called for the United States to engage in a World Trade Organization (WTO)
dispute settlement proceeding against the European Union’s (EU) new
requirements for the traceability and labeling of food and feed products
produced through biotechnology.
"These requirements are non-tariff trade
barriers that violate WTO obligations and will result in significant
losses to the U.S. food and agriculture industry," said ASA
President Ron Heck, a soybean producer from Perry, Iowa. "ASA is
urging United States Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Zoellick to take
action to prevent further disruption of U.S. agricultural commodity and
food product exports to the European Union resulting from these
regulations."
The new regulations, published on October 18, 2003,
in the Official Journal of the European Union, clearly violate the EU’s
WTO obligations. The Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) and Technical
Barriers to Trade (TBT) agreements require that import restrictions not
discriminate between imported and domestic products and not be overly
restrictive to trade. The SPS agreement also requires that any measures
which have the effect of restricting trade must be based on scientific
principles.
"The new EU regulations are not consistent with
these provisions and clearly discriminate against imported
products," Heck said. "In addition, the requirements would set
a precedent for process-based traceability and labeling that could
create potentially insurmountable technical barriers to trade, and
discourage adoption and acceptance of new technologies, including
biotechnology, around the globe."
The products of modern biotechnology already must
undergo intensive scientific and regulatory review before being approved
to enter the EU market, and the EU has not identified any science-based
risks associated with approved biotech products. Despite this, the
regulations use the "Precautionary Principle" and other
non-science based factors to justify the implementation of costly and
trade-restrictive traceability and labeling requirements.
"The United States Government consistently has
opposed the use of such criteria for restricting trade and must
rigorously challenge EU regulations that embody these concepts,"
Heck said. "Soybean producers believe the Bush Administration must
challenge the EU’s new regulations in anticipation that other
countries will come under pressure from the EU and activist groups to
adopt similar requirements and restrictions."
ASA is also concerned that if left unchallenged, the
EU requirements will influence international organizations, such as the
Codex Alimentarius Commission, to adopt similar requirements as global
standards that will negatively affect U.S. agricultural commodity and
food exports.
ASA is urging USTR to initiate a review by the
International Trade Commission of the impact these requirements will
have on U.S. agricultural commodity and food exports to quantify
economic losses to U.S. farmers, exporters, and food companies.
"The U.S. government must take every possible
action to confront these trade-distorting policies and prevent further
erosion of U.S. agriculture and food export markets in the EU and other
countries," Heck said. "Now that the EU’s regulations have
been finalized, it is time to engage the EU in a WTO dispute settlement
proceeding immediately."
In the marketing year that ended August 31, 2003, the
United States exported 209 million bushels (5.7 million metric tons) of
soybeans to the EU, which was 27 percent below the previous year when
exports totaled 286 million bushels (7.8 million metric tons). ASA
estimates that the EU’s biotech policies have already damaged U.S.
soybean exports largely as a result of apprehension among trade
customers about implementation of the new requirements for labeling and
traceability.
ASA believes that the new regulations will further
damage U.S. soybean and food exports to the EU by increasing the cost of
imported goods through costly traceability requirements. Additionally,
ASA believes the non-science based labeling requirements will drive food
manufacturers to reformulate to take biotech ingredients out of their
products rather than place stigmatizing biotech labels on their brands.
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For more information contact:
Ron Heck, ASA President, 515/275-2853, checkers@netins.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
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