Oman Daily Observer

US traders reject GMO crops that lack global approval

The United States is the biggest producer of GMO crops

- — Reuters

NEW YORK: Across the US Farm Belt, top grain handlers have banned geneticall­y modified crops that are not approved in all major overseas markets, shaking up a decades-old system that used the world’s biggest exporting country as a launchpad for new seeds from companies like Monsanto Co.

Bold yellow signs from global trader Bunge Ltd are posted at US grain elevators barring 19 varieties of GMO corn and soybeans that lack approval in important markets.

CHS Inc, the country’s largest farm cooperativ­e, wants companies to keep seeds with new biotech traits off the market until they have full approval from major foreign buyers, Gary Anderson, a senior vice president for CHS, told Reuters.

“I think that would be the safest thing for the supply chain,” he said. CHS implemente­d a policy last year under which it will not sell seeds or buy grain that contains traits lacking approvals needed for export.

The US farm sector is trying to avoid a repeat of the turmoil that occurred in 2013 and 2014, when China turned away boatloads of US corn containing a Syngenta AG trait called Viptera that it had not approved. Viptera corn was engineered to control insects.

Cargill Inc and Archer Daniels Midland Co each said the rejections cost them millions of dollars, and both companies have sued Syngenta for damages. ADM is refusing GMO crops that lack global approval. Cargill did not respond to requests for comment.

The United States is the biggest producer of GMO crops and has long been at the forefront of technology aiming to protect crops against insects or allow them to resist herbicides.

That innovation is now seen as a risk to trade because it is hard to segregate crops containing unapproved traits from the billions of identical-looking bushels exported every year.

Soren Schroder, Chief Executive Officer for Bunge, said the practice of launching GMO seeds without full approval is “very risky.”

The latest crop being banned is Monsanto’s Roundup Ready 2 Xtend soybean, whose seeds are geneticall­y engineered to resist the herbicides glyphosate and dicamba. It is being sold for the first time in the United States and Canada this year despite lacking clearance from the European Union, an important export market for North American soybeans.

Monsanto said it expects EU approval soon. It initially projected farmers would plant the seed on 3 million acres in the United States, roughly 4 per cent of overall plantings, and 420,000 acres in Canada.

Plantings have already begun in North America, and Monsanto spokeswoma­n Trish Jordan said that each passing week without EU authorizat­ion lowers the forecast for acreage in Canada.

The company is allowing growers to switch to another variety and has not yet shipped Xtend seeds to farmers who have ordered it in Canada.

Monsanto has not publicly lowered its US forecast.

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