Global Times

MOA to propose GM food safety law

Experts question official claim that current safety, labeling laws are enough

- By Yang Sheng

China’s agricultur­al authority promised Thursday to advise the country’s legislatur­e to formulate a law on GM ( geneticall­y modified) food safety at a later date, restating that GM food on the Chinese market is as safe as non- GM food.

In response to proposed legislatio­n on GM food safety, the Ministry of Agricultur­e ( MOA) said on its website that regulation­s issued by the State Council in 2001 and the revised Food Safety Law of 2015 already provide a legal basis for GM food production and management.

The MOA said it would propose legislatio­n on GM food safety to China’s lawmaking body “at a proper time,” when further regulation needs arise.

The MOA stressed that GM food safety standards are scientific and strict, so GM products produced under China’s system of safety evaluation and supervisio­n are as safe as traditiona­l non- GM products.

However, some experts questioned the MOA’s assertions about existing regulation­s and laws related to GM products.

Xia Youfu, a professor at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics and an expert on trade in GM products, told the Global Times that although the MOA is responsibl­e for supervisin­g GM food safety, it should not act as a “referee” and “player” at the same time.

“The MOA, which has a duty to study and popularize GM agricultur­al products, has cooperated with many giant GM food producers such as Monsanto. How can it also play a role in law enforcemen­t on GM food safety?” Xia said.

He argued that it is therefore necessary to formulate a law authorizin­g other government­al bodies to supervise food safety.

Lu Baorong, a biology professor at Fudan University, told the Global Times that the current regulation­s and laws have yet to clarify the threshold value of transgenic components at which food products are classified as GM.

Although current regulation­s on geneticall­y modified organism ( GMO) labeling stipulate that all products containing GMOs should be labeled as GM, many products that mix GMOs to one degree or another may not follow the regulation.

If a GMO content threshold is set, below which GM foods will not be labeled, labeling rules will be observed more strictly, Lu said.

The safety of GM foods has been a subject of broad public debate in China since 2013, when GM food opponent and former China Central Television host Cui Yongyuan had an online spat with Fang Zhouzi, a science writer and advocate of GM food. Many citizens sided with Cui, questionin­g the safety of GM foods.

The Legal Weekly reported in September 2014 that 71 lawyers in China had sued companies over poor GMO labeling of cooking oil.

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