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The European Parliament on
July 3, 2002 voted for a tough bill that requires the labeling of genetically-modified
(GM) food products, risking the anger of US farmers and fanning a trade
row.
The new rules, passed in a
first reading, require any food and animal feed sold in the EU to carry
a label alerting consumers to the presence of GM ingredients.
This applies even if genetically
altered material cannot be identified in tests because it has been destroyed
through processing, as in the case of oils and sugars. Green groups and
the European Commission, the EU executive, were broadly pleased while
a US government official was disappointed.
Greenpeace welcomed what it
called the "world's strictest legislation'' in GM labeling, although
it and other environmental pressure groups were unhappy parliament had
rejected labeling food, such as meat and eggs, from animals fed with GM
feed.
The draft regulations, which
also require the approval of EU governments, are the last piece of tight
European Union rules designed to ease consumers' concerns about GM organisms
which opponents fear could pose environmental or health risks.
In a crucial decision, parliament
voted against a proposal to put the onus of labeling on producers of non-GM
foods, a move the Greens said would have turned conventional foods into
niche products and put GM products in the mainstream.
The United States regards genetic
engineering as normal in agriculture and has already questioned the legality
under global trade rules of EU restrictions on GM products.
The bill would force farmers
and importers to segregate GM from conventional crops and has enraged
the US farm lobby which says it will be costly, of no benefit to consumers
or the environment, and could prompt a transatlantic trade dispute.
Future
Of GM Moratorium
But the new rules may be essential
to reopen the authorization procedure for GM crops, blocked since June
1999.
A hard core of seven EU states
has demanded a regimen to ensure GM foods are labeled as such and can
be traced back through the food production chain if health problems arise.
Greens among Members of the
European Parliament -- the most anti-GM group in parliament -- were delighted
by the vote.
The
Guardian July 4, 2002
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