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BRUSSELS - EU environment experts will touch on thorny issues of national

sovereignty next week when they debate whether to order five countries to end

their bans on gene crops and foods, officials said on Thursday.

 

 

Between 1997 and 2000, several countries introduced bans on genetically modified

(GMO) products already approved for use across EU territory.

That was before the bloc began its de facto moratorium on authorising new GMOs,

which ended in May.

 

Austria, France, Germany, Greece and Luxembourg used a provision in EU law to

block the use of specific GMOs, focusing on three modified maize and two

rapeseed types.

 

The national bans mostly relate to cultivation as well as use in animal feed.

 

The European Commission wants these bans scrapped within 20 days, in proposals

that are up for debate at a meeting on Monday.

 

" The five countries that have bans will definitely argue their case. This is a

legal issue -- the new Commission hasn't objected so far, it seems happy to let

the process continue. We want them (bans) lifted, " a Commission official told

Reuters.

 

For Brussels to order an EU government to do this could be extremely unpopular,

especially in countries such as Austria, where opinion is strongly opposed to

biotechnology in foods and there is a movement to establish entire GMO-free

zones.

 

Such an order would probably be contested by at least some of the five countries

at the EU's top court, the European Court of Justice, a move likely to lead to

years of legal wrangling.

 

TEST FOR NEW COMMISSION

 

" These are the dinosaur plants of the GM world. No one has missed them in the

last 10 years. Some are so outdated that even the companies that created them

have no desire to promote them, " said Christopher Then of environmental group

Greenpeace.

 

" Any attempt by the Commission to overturn the bans is pure political bullying, "

he said in a statement.

 

Diplomats say part of Commission's rush to lift the bans is due to a case filed

against the EU by the United States, Canada and Argentina at the World Trade

Organization, which say that the EU's moratorium flouted world trade norms.

 

Attention will also focus on the new Commission for remarks that might reveal

its thinking on GMO policy.

 

" The most important thing is what they will say and do, " Geert Ritsema from

Friends of the Earth Europe told Reuters.

 

" This is a test case -- it will be a very good occasion to see how the new

Commission behaves. "

 

 

 

Story by Jeremy Smith

 

 

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

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ya know..i have such high hopes fer the EU..but they keep tossin out sh*t like

this....

don't follow us down this path!!!!

 

 

Craig Dearth <cd39

Nov 25, 2004 6:18 PM

001plgormcs <plgormcs >

EU & GMO oh my

 

 

 

BRUSSELS - EU environment experts will touch on thorny issues of national

sovereignty next week when they debate whether to order five countries to end

their bans on gene crops and foods, officials said on Thursday.

 

 

Between 1997 and 2000, several countries introduced bans on genetically modified

(GMO) products already approved for use across EU territory.

That was before the bloc began its de facto moratorium on authorising new GMOs,

which ended in May.

 

Austria, France, Germany, Greece and Luxembourg used a provision in EU law to

block the use of specific GMOs, focusing on three modified maize and two

rapeseed types.

 

The national bans mostly relate to cultivation as well as use in animal feed.

 

The European Commission wants these bans scrapped within 20 days, in proposals

that are up for debate at a meeting on Monday.

 

" The five countries that have bans will definitely argue their case. This is a

legal issue -- the new Commission hasn't objected so far, it seems happy to let

the process continue. We want them (bans) lifted, " a Commission official told

Reuters.

 

For Brussels to order an EU government to do this could be extremely unpopular,

especially in countries such as Austria, where opinion is strongly opposed to

biotechnology in foods and there is a movement to establish entire GMO-free

zones.

 

Such an order would probably be contested by at least some of the five countries

at the EU's top court, the European Court of Justice, a move likely to lead to

years of legal wrangling.

 

TEST FOR NEW COMMISSION

 

" These are the dinosaur plants of the GM world. No one has missed them in the

last 10 years. Some are so outdated that even the companies that created them

have no desire to promote them, " said Christopher Then of environmental group

Greenpeace.

 

" Any attempt by the Commission to overturn the bans is pure political bullying, "

he said in a statement.

 

Diplomats say part of Commission's rush to lift the bans is due to a case filed

against the EU by the United States, Canada and Argentina at the World Trade

Organization, which say that the EU's moratorium flouted world trade norms.

 

Attention will also focus on the new Commission for remarks that might reveal

its thinking on GMO policy.

 

" The most important thing is what they will say and do, " Geert Ritsema from

Friends of the Earth Europe told Reuters.

 

" This is a test case -- it will be a very good occasion to see how the new

Commission behaves. "

 

 

 

Story by Jeremy Smith

 

 

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

 

 

 

 

 

 

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