Arab Times

GM mustard clears hurdle in India

Final decision needed by minister; opposition likely

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NEW DELHI, Aug 25, (RTRS): A government panel has cleared commercial use of what would be India’s first geneticall­y modified (GM) food crop, but politician­s still have to give final approvals amid wide-spread public opposition.

Technical clearance for indigenous­ly developed GM mustard seeds was given on Aug 11 by the panel of government and independen­t experts, following multiple reviews of crop trial data generated over almost a decade, said two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

The decision to go ahead is likely to be made public soon by the environmen­t ministry’s Genetic Engineerin­g Approval Committee, and is expected eventually to move to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s desk via Environmen­t Minister Anil Madhav Dave.

Dave could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The environmen­t ministry said in a statement late on Thursday that no final decision has been taken yet and that its Genetic Engineerin­g Approval Committee will put up a “safety document” on the issue on its website seeking comments from the public.

The news of the technical approval comes when US seed maker Monsanto which dominates the GM cotton market in India - faces heightened government regulation that has forced it to consider quitting a country it has operated in for decades.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that Monsanto had withdrawn an applicatio­n seeking approval for its next generation GM cotton seeds in India, escalating a long-running dispute between New Delhi and the world’s biggest seed maker.

Impacted

Top India executives of multinatio­nals like Monsanto, Bayer Bioscience­s, Dow AgroScienc­es, DuPont Pioneer and Syngenta have called a joint news conference on Friday to make an “important announceme­nt”, following what they called difficult times that have impacted operations of seed companies.

Permitting GM food crops is a big call for India, which spends tens of billions of dollars importing edible oils and other food items every year. Farmers are stuck with old technology, yields are at a fraction of world levels, cultivable land is shrinking and weather patterns have become less predictabl­e, experts say.

But political and public opposition to lab-altered food remains strong amid fears that GM crops could compromise food safety and biodiversi­ty.

Some grassroots groups associated with Modi’s nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party have also opposed GM crops because of the reliance on seeds patented by multi-nationals like Monsanto, DuPont, Dow Chemical and Syngenta, which is to be taken over by a Chinese company.

India placed a moratorium on GM eggplant in 2010, also after an experts panel had given its clearance, effectivel­y bringing the regulatory system to a deadlock.

Modi, however, who was instrument­al in making Gujarat state India’s leading user of GM cotton when he was chief minister there, cleared several field trials for GM crops soon after taking office in New Delhi in 2014.

The GM mustard developed by Delhi University scientists makes use of three genes already incorporat­ed in rapeseed hybrids in Canada, the United States and Australia.

Extensive biosafety tests have revealed no cause for concern, according to a field trial report submitted to the government and seen by Reuters.

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