17 Oct 2002
The European Commission today announced that the process for commercial approvals of genetically modified food and crops in Europe is to be left to biotech companies and Member States. But Member States attending todays Council of Environment Ministers meeting in Luxemburg refused to reconsider the moratorium on commercial approvals after failing to agree legislation on labelling and traceability.
Any Member State wanting to start a new commercial approval process,
would have to do so under the new Deliberate Release Directive (which
came into force today). This would take 10 to 14 months. Friends of
the Earth called on Members States to introduce strict labelling and
traceability rule during this period.
Friends of the Earth Europe GMO campaigner Geert Retsima said:
The fact that Ministers did not reach agreement on
a tighter labelling regime today means consumers will have to wait longer
before they have a genuine chance to avoid GM
in their food. We urge Ministers to agree strict
GM labelling rules as soon as possible.
That will effectively establish a new moratorium
because 70% of consumers have expressed a desire to avoid GM in their
diet. Even with tough labelling rules, major problems
such as liability, seed purity and the coexistence of GM and non GM
crops need to be resolved before the moratorium is lifted.
See photos of Friends of the Earths call for action on GM at
:
www.foeeurope.org
Europe-wide opinion polls indicate that 94 per cent of the public want labelling to give them a choice about eating GM foods, while 71 per cent reject GM food.
Contact details:
Friends of the Earth
26-28 Underwood St.
LONDON
N1 7JQ
Tel: 020 7490 1555
Fax: 020 7490 0881
Web: www.foe.co.uk/feedback.html
Media team