Guest guest Posted February 15, 2003 Report Share Posted February 15, 2003 I found this on Rense.com Comments? Misty http://www..com EU Food Prices Could Rise Under New GM Rules BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Europe's food industry lobby said on Friday that food will become more expensive if new EU rules on labeling genetically-modified (GM) goods are adopted, increasing resistance to a law also criticized by U.S. firms. The President of the EU's food and drink industry lobby group (CIAA), Jean Martin, said current draft legislation on the labeling and traceability of GM food would create extra costs for companies in non-GM goods. " There's a risk (of prices rising) if Europe insists on having GM- free goods, " the Frenchman told reporters. The European Commission hopes the proposal will end a four-year ban on new GM food which the United States has threatened to challenge in the World Trade Organization (WTO). Martin also wants the moratorium lifted and supports consumer choice on the controversial issue. But he said labeling should be based on whether genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) can be detected in the final food product instead of catch-all labeling rules. Under the proposals which EU farm ministers provisionally agreed in November 2002, all food and feed containing 0.9 percent of authorized GMOs would be labeled. They set the labeling threshold for the accidental presence of authorized GMOs in food at 0.5 percent. The European Parliament is expected to debate this proposal in the first half of 2003, with final adoption hoped for the end of the year. Martin said the planned procedure for checking the presence of GMOs in food will be cumbersome and expensive. This is because it is based on documents stating there are no GMOs present at every stage of the supply chain rather than a laboratory test. " We're not against traceability, we're against basing labeling on a paper trail, " said Martin, adding that the system is open to fraud. Environmental organization Greenpeace rejects all these concerns and says the new system will be cheaper. " Once the European traceability system is put in place, costs will decrease as the scattered supermarket controls will be harmonized, " said Greenpeace EU Policy Director for Genetic Engineering, Lorenzo Consoli. U.S. companies have also said the new system will be cumbersome and expensive and could create a barrier to trade even if the European market for GM goods is opened. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.