Tech welcome for Queen's speech
Science agencies and farming organisations welcomed the announcement of measures to provide a more straightforward route to market for seeds and crops using advanced breeding technologies such as gene editing in the Queen’s Speech.
The announcement revealed that the UK Government would bring forward new primary legislation, ‘The Genetic Technology (Precision Breeding) Bill’, to take certain techniques out of the scope of GMO rules, where the resulting plants could have occurred naturally or through conventional breeding methods.
Following the recent introduction of rule changes to free up experimental field trials of gene edited crops, the National Institute of Agricultural Bot any( NI A B) said the announcement marked a further importantstep towards more science based regulation of technologies, giving a boost to prospects for UK plant science and more sustainable farming systems.
NFU Scotland president Martin Kennedy said that precision breeding techniques could deliver benefits for food, agriculture and climate change.
“New technologies can help positively address some of the big challenges Scottish agriculture faces, including how we respond to the climate emergency and address biodiversity loss,” said Kennedy, hinting at Scottish Government opposition.
“We firmly believe that precision breeding techniques as a route to crop and livestock improvement could allow us to grow crops which are more resilient to increased pest and disease pressure brought about by our changing climate and more extreme weather events.”