EuroNews (English)

Parliament reinforces support for GMO deregulati­on

- Robert Hodgson

The European Parliament has confi rmed that plants created using new gene-editing techniques should be removed from the scope of a 2001 directive on geneticall­y modifi ed organisms (GMOs), and the creation of two new categories of crops to be subject to a lighter regulatory touch.

MEPs originally voted in favour of the legislatio­n in February, effectivel­y calling for a regulatory regime where a plant that has only had a limited number of point changes to made to its DNA sequence would be subject to more or less the same rules as a convention­ally bred crop strain.

The vote was deemed necessary because government­s have so far failed to reach a joint position on the le in the EU Council, meaning the inter-institutio­nal talks required to produce a nal legislativ­e text are unlikely to begin before the EU election in June.

Today’s (24 April) vote nalises the parliament’s rst- reading position, meaning the newly elected house will not have to start from scratch when it convenes in July, a parliament­ary offi cial told Euronews.

Parliament backs deregulati­on of new GMOs amid warning from German watchdog, ongoing patents row

The lobby group Euroseeds - whose members include agrochemic­al giants Bayer, BASF and Syngenta - welcomed the parliament’s move, which it took as an endorsemen­t of the potential of new genomic techniques (NGTs) to “boost competitiv­eness, sustainabi­lity, and food security across Europe”.

“Now, we call on the Council to build on this momentum and swiftly secure a majority for the - nal adoption of the new NGT legislatio­n,” secretary general Garlich von Essen said. “Europe’s plant breeders and farmers urgently need to be enabled to harness the benefi ts of NGTs to successful­ly address the pressing agricultur­al challenges and deliver sustainabl­e solutions.”

Environmen­tal groups have from the off campaigned against a regulatory reform they see it opening a market for next-generation GMOs, whose potential environmen­tal and health impact have not been suffi ciently taken into account.

The German NGO Testbiotec­h last week cited recent research it said refuted the claims of NGT backers that the new class of GMOs could equally be produced, albeit more slowly, through convention­al breeding, and urged the European Food Safety Authority to re-examine its earlier advice on the safety of NGT products.

 ?? ?? A protest in February outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg. 'Regulate New GMOs', reads the placard.
A protest in February outside the European Parliament in Strasbourg. 'Regulate New GMOs', reads the placard.

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