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ASA Applauds WTO Final
Ruling Against EU Biotech Moratorium
September 29, 2006... Saint Louis, Missouri... The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today applauded a World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling
against the European Union’s (EU) ban on the approval of
biotech-enhanced agricultural products. The decision finalizes a
preliminary WTO ruling made in February.
"ASA advocates that decisions regarding approval of agricultural
biotechnology products must be based on objective risk analyses, not
political pressures, and must be consistent with the requirements in the
WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures," said ASA President Rick Ostlie, a soybean producer from
Northwood, N. Dak. "The EU’s actions have been highly
discriminatory and commercially unfeasible."
In May 2003, the United States filed a WTO case against the EU’s
illegal five-year moratorium on approval of food and feed products
enhanced through biotechnology. Numerous other countries, including
Australia, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, New Zealand,
Peru and Uruguay, joined the United States in the complaint because they
also want to ensure that science-based determinations are applied to
regulatory decisions.
The conclusions of a publicly released WTO panel draft interim report
on the EU’s moratorium on the approval of biotechnology products stated
these key conclusions:
- International trade rules fully support trade in products of
biotechnology for planting, processing and marketing, subject to
science-based regulation;
- De facto bans or moratoria on approvals by Europe and other WTO
member countries will not escape scrutiny;
- The Biosafety Protocol and the Convention on Biodiversity are not
relevant to the interpretation of the issues on the moratorium;
- Measures taken under the guise of the Precautionary Principal absent
relevant scientific evidence are not justified;
- Politically motivated bans or moratoria by WTO member states are not
consistent with members’ WTO obligations.
"ASA strongly supports the U.S. Trade Representative and the Bush
Administration in the U.S. WTO action against the European Union,"
Ostlie said. "Half the value of the U.S. soybean crop is exported to
global markets that were built over the past 50 years as a result of ASA’s
international marketing efforts and the diligence of the U.S. government
to promote fair trade."
ASA urges the USTR to insist the EU meet its obligations. Decisions on
products currently in the pipeline should be finalized as soon as
possible. Reviews of subsequent applications must be timely and
consistent. Additionally, it is essential that the EU Member States also
comply with the WTO decision. These critical actions are important to end
the trade barriers erected by the EU and to guide other WTO members’
decisions so that they do not institute bans or non-science based approval
systems in violation of their obligations.
"While welcoming this WTO ruling against Europe’s flawed and
non-science based approval process, ASA is also calling on the Bush
Administration to mount a WTO challenge against Europe’s discriminatory
traceability and labeling laws that apply to biotech crops," Ostlie
said. "This favorable WTO ruling should only be seen as ‘step one’
of the actions against Europe’s unjustified and unscientific policies
toward biotechnology."
In 1997, the EU introduced mandatory labeling requirements for all
foods with detectable presence of ingredients derived from biotech crops.
In March 2004, the EU implemented new legislation that significantly
broadened the scope of those labeling requirements. Labeling is now
required for all foods and feeds that contain or consist of biotech
products, regardless of whether that presence is detectable through
testing.
The EU imposed these requirements despite repeated pronouncements by EU
scientific committees that biotech foods and feeds are entirely safe.
Indeed, many EU leaders have admitted that the labels serve no food safety
purpose. Nevertheless, consumers perceive the labels as health warnings,
and most EU food companies and retailers have therefore decided against
marketing labeled foods. As a result, U.S. exports of biotech products to
the EU, including U.S. soybeans, have fallen sharply.
"With this WTO victory fresh in hand against Europe’s
discriminatory biotech system, the United States and our allies must now
challenge Europe’s even more egregious biotech traceability and labeling
rules," Ostlie said. "These unfair and non-science based rules
are costing U.S. soybeans farmers and U.S. food companies hundreds of
millions of dollars in lost sales each year. ASA looks forward to working
closely with U.S. Trade Representative and others in the Administration to
mount such a WTO challenge."
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For more information contact:
Richard Ostlie, ASA President, 701-587-5961, rjostlie@polarcomm.com
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm |