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ASA Plays Key Role in Protecting U.S. Soy Exports to
Europe
September 11, 2008… Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) is being credited with playing a key role in defeating
a ban in Poland that was to prohibit import, production and use of
animal feed derived from biotech crops by August 12, 2008. Avoiding this
ban prevented the disruption of U.S. soybean exports to the European
Union (EU) generally, and exports of U.S. manufactured feed to Poland,
worth $100 million annually.
"The GM feed ban was defeated by a coalition of the Polish Feed
Millers, Poultry Association, and Pork Association, and U.S. trade
associations, led by the American Soybean Association, and diplomatic
representations including the Governments of the United States,
Argentina, and Canada," reports Eric Wenberg, Agricultural Counselor in
the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Foreign Agricultural Service
(FAS) Office of Agricultural Affairs at the American Embassy in Warsaw.
"This success has also triggered a greater appreciation in Poland’s
farm sector for starting a healthy, progressive debate on biotechnology,
a key ASA objective in Europe," said ASA President John Hoffman, a
soybean producer from Waterloo, Iowa. "Poland’s negative voting record
in Brussels has contributed to the delays in approving new U.S.
biotechnology crops for export."
The ASA, supported by FAS Warsaw, played a key role in defeating the
ban as a spillover effect from the ASA’s work to highlight the problem
of delayed EU approval of new biotechnology soybean varieties for use in
animal feeds, the so-called "asynchronous approval problem."
"The educational activities of the American Soybean Association and
FAS Warsaw helped Polish industry get the ammunition they needed to beat
the feed ban and has left in place a coalition of contacts working hard
to improve EU biotechnology policy generally," said Wenberg. "The feed
ban would have jeopardized roughly $6.4 billion in Polish pork or
poultry production, not including losses for feed compounders."
Teams representing ASA’s Biotech Advocacy and Education program
visited Poland in October 2007 and February 2008 on itineraries
organized in conjunction with FAS Warsaw to work with Polish importers
and the feed industry on the asynchronous approval issue.
"This asynchronous problem, if left unsolved, could lead to the loss
of an $800 million market for American soybeans in 2009, as delayed EU
approvals of new biotech soybean events would mean these traits would
not be authorized for import into EU member states," Wenberg said.
On July 27, 2008, just two weeks before a ban would have gone into
effect, Poland’s President Lech Aleksander Kaczyński
signed a law pushing back the introduction of a ban to 2013,
effectively killing the legislation. Defeating the ban also benefited
major U.S-based multinationals with investments in Polish agriculture
that might have imploded without access to quality, cost-competitive
feeds.
Since 2006, Poland has professed an official anti-biotech position,
consistently opposes EU approval of new biotech products, and announced
that Poland should be a "GM-free" country. The government banned the
sale and registration of biotech seeds in mid-2006.
"Our success in Poland is a great example showing how the FAS and
cooperators like ASA work together to open and maintain markets for U.S.
agricultural exports," Hoffman said. "During the more than 50 years that
ASA has been partnering with USDA to implement international marketing
programs, the American Soybean Association has built worldwide
recognition and an excellent reputation for helping our customers
benefit from the quality and safety of U.S. soybeans and soybean
products."
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 233-9480, jhoffman@neotek.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Eric Wenberg, Agricultural Counselor, U.S. Embassy Warsaw, (48) 22
504-2336
Andrew Schilling, Press Attaché, U.S. Embassy Warsaw (48) 22 504-2000,
media@state.gov
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