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ASA Urges EU Commission to Find Practical Solution for
the Low Level Presence of Biotech Traits Not Yet Approved in EU
July 9, 2008... Saint Louis, Missouri... The American Soybean
Association (ASA) this week 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.
The 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.
Since 1994, ASA has carried out numerous missions to the EU on
biotechnology issues. In the course of the past six months, ASA has held
many meetings in the EU on the asynchronous approvals and zero tolerance
issues. In almost all of these meetings, ASA has been asked about zero
tolerances (and in particular very low-level tolerances such as 0.1
percent) by concerned EU industries from the feed and farming sectors.
In a letter to Paola Testori Coggi, Deputy Director General, DG SANCO,
European Commission, ASA President John Hoffman, a soybean producer from
Waterloo, Iowa, said, "We have made it very clear that ASA views low
level tolerances of 0.1 percent as wholly impractical for commodity
soybean crop production and imports. Given the complex nature of
commodity production and exportation involving millions of metric tons
of soybeans grown by hundreds of thousands of growers on millions of
acres/hectares, a tolerance of 5 percent should be a minimum starting
point."
Hoffman also pointed out that the OECD (Organization for Economic
Co-Operation and Development) standards for certified planting seed are
set a 99 percent purity level. These rigorous OECD standards have been
developed with the strong participation of EU Member State governments
and industry to apply to planting seeds, not general commodity
production. As such, the required purity standards for commodity imports
should be lower (i.e., less than 99 percent purity) than that which the
OECD, European governments, and industry have determined should apply to
planting seeds.
"U.S. soybean growers have exported soybeans to Europe for more than
50 years and want to continue to do so," Hoffman said. However, both we
and our European customers in the feed and farm sectors recognize the
urgent need for a sensible solution to the wholly impractical zero
tolerance law. This is especially crucial given the increasing number of
biotech soybean events that have either gained authorization from
functioning regulatory systems in many other countries or are very close
to commercialization."
ASA is the policy advocate and collective voice of its 22,000
producer-members on domestic and international issues of importance to
all U.S. soybean farmers.
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 233-9480, jhoffman@neotek.net
Johnny Dodson, ASA First Vice President, (731) 225-1942, johnnydodson@bellsouth.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at: www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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