EU’S next food fight: regulating gene-edited crops
Extreme weather caused by climate change has damaged food production across Europe.
Confronted with a deteriorating situation, divided European Union decision-makers are debating new rules for genetically modified crops.
Last year’s drought ravaged the continent’s farms, starving everything from Spanish olive harvests to Hungary’s maize and sunflower crops, Italian and Romanian corn fields to France’s dairy production.
Some argue the answer to Europe’s problems is deregulating gene modification techniques to produce better crops. Others claim this would be a “smokescreen” to avoid having to radically change the way the bloc farms.
Supporters say seeds produced using gene editing techniques are less vulnerable to drought and disease — and require less water.
The European Commission, the EU’S executive arm, will propose a law in July that will loosen the rules on plants produced by certain new genomic techniques (NGTS), branded by critics as simply “new genetically modified organisms (GMOS)”.
The proposals will open a new battlefront among the EU’S 27 member states — with drought-hit countries especially in favour — and between EU lawmakers. The new techniques are a mix of genomic editing tools that alter a plant’s genetic make-up without the addition of foreign genetic material, unlike “transgenic” GMOS that include DNA from other species.
The commission says the current rules on GMOS including permission and labelling are “not fit for purpose” for the new technology.
“Plants produced by new genomic techniques can support sustainability,” the EU’S health commissioner, Stella Kyriakides, said last month.
The proposals, she said, “will strongly signal to farmers, researchers and industry that this is the way forward in the EU”. In a document from February, the commission looked at whether it should treat traditional seeds and those produced using the new techniques, with modifications that could in theory have happened naturally, as the same. France, severely affected by drought last summer, backs changing the rules.
In April, French Agriculture Minister Marc Fesneau expressed his concerns over what he called Europe’s “delay”, arguing there should be a push to allow biotechnology that gives Europe the tools to deal with climate change by producing more resistant seeds. Late last year, his Spanish counterpart, Luis Planas, hailed the techniques as a “magnificent tool to have seeds that need less water and fertiliser”. —