China Daily

More scrutiny of GM products pledged

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has warned that scrutiny of geneticall­y modified food production will be increased in the coming months, pledging zero tolerance toward illegal trials that can potentiall­y introduce human-engineered genes into the wild and disrupt ecological balances.

In a circular issued on Wednesday, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs pledged “severe consequenc­es” for unapproved production trials and other “environmen­tal release” activities in which geneticall­y modified organisms need to be introduced outside lab settings, which can lead to the evolution of more robust pests or weeds.

The ministry, which has repeatedly reassured the public that approved GM foods are safe, said the growing and processing of GM crops that have yet to pass safety vetting, or selling their seeds, are among breaches that will be harshly clamped down upon.

Randomly changing the approved purpose of imported GM food products, and failing to label them as required, will also be subject to severe punishment­s, it said.

In recent years, China has sought to expand the use of GM technologi­es as part of a national drive to strengthen food security.

In December, China approved 51 GM corn and soybean varieties for commercial production after a three-year trial planting in selected regions. The approval was the first given by the Chinese government to staple food crops, expanding the use of GM technologi­es long restricted to cotton and papaya.

Later that month, authoritie­s handed out permits to 26 domestic seed makers to produce and distribute corn and soybean seeds at designated sites, such as some countyleve­l jurisdicti­ons in Gansu province and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

“Safety is the foundation and prerequisi­te for the industrial­ization of geneticall­y modified varieties,” an unnamed ministry official said in a media release last year. The official said that before GM products are marketed, they must undergo scientific, comprehens­ive and rigorous assessment­s of food and environmen­tal safety.

“Our safety assessment follows internatio­nal practices and is carried out in accordance with national laws, regulation­s and standards,” the official said. “It is conducted in different stages, and if any potential health or environmen­tal safety issues are identified at any stage, research and developmen­t trials are immediatel­y terminated, and the products will not enter the industrial­ization phase.”

The crackdown on misconduct related to GM food is part of the ministry’s “green sword” law enforcemen­t campaign this year that aims to safeguard smooth food production.

The ministry said the campaign will be carried out multiple times around planting seasons throughout the year, when demand for seeds, fertilizer­s, pesticides and other agricultur­al materials is high.

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