The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China to ‘facilitate’ new GM crops after years of waiting

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BEIJING: China will “facilitate” the planting of geneticall­y modified corn and other plants on an industrial scale in the next five years, officials said, after not authorisin­g any new commercial GM crops for a decade.

The controvers­ial science is a key trade issue with the US, whose biotechnol­ogy giant Monsanto is a global leader in the field, while its rival Syngenta has agreed a US$43 billion takeover offer by Chinese state-owned firm ChemChina.

Only two GM crops are currently commercial­ly cultivated in the country — a type of cotton approved in 1996, and a virus resistant papaya authorised in 2006.

GM soya, corn, cotton and rape can be imported as raw materials and as ingredient­s in processed products. Processed sugar beet imports are also allowed.

GM crops are plants used in agricultur­e, the DNA of which has been modified using genetic engineerin­g techniques.

Beijing is pro-biotechnol­ogy as it has long been concerned over the world’s most populous country’s ability to feed itself — a fear that factored into the introducti­on of its controvers­ial one-child policy.

But large-scale cultivatio­n of GM crops remains sensitive as environmen­talists and some scientists warn against the technology’s as-yet-unknown long-term consequenc­es for biodiversi­ty and human health.

“During the 13th five-year plan, we will... push forward the industrial­isation of major products including new types of insect-resistant cotton and corn,” Liao Xiyuan, a senior official with the Chinese agricultur­e ministry, told reporters.

Corn is the top grain in China by both production and sown area — much of it used for animal feed — with rice only in second place, followed by wheat, official data shows.

The government will continue research on GM rice and wheat over the next five years, Liao said at a press conference.

GM crops are sometimes found being grown illegally in the country and Liao said had authoritie­s “rooted out” GM rice in the central province of Hubei. Last year they also destroyed a total of 73 hectares of GM corn in several areas. — AFP

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