St. Louis, Missouri
February 27, 2004
The American
Soybean Association (ASA) is extremely disappointed at the
outcome of the BioSafety Protocol (BSP) meetings held this week
in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where negotiators representing nearly
90 countries agreed to stringent rules governing future trade in
agricultural products derived from crops enhanced through
biotechnology. The rules create onerous record keeping and
reporting requirements for growers, grain handlers and
exporters.
"Although
the treaty underlying the BioSafety Protocol has a noble goal of
protecting the world’s biodiversity, the European Union and
anti-biotech activists hijacked the process to serve their own
political ends of further restricting trade in biotech
products," said ASA President Ron Heck, a soybean producer from
Perry, Iowa. "These rules will increase food cost and decrease
the availability of healthy, high quality food products for
millions of people around the world."
Following
the Biosafety Protocol meetings held four years ago, the ASA
publicly cautioned that the BSP terms being considered would
require an additional amount of paperwork and needless expense
associated with documentation of shipments, and that this would
become an even greater burden on the whole commodity system if
proposed rules are implemented that require identification of
each different variety of biotech crop contained in every
shipment.
"For
decades, the modern world has made decisions based on sound
scientific facts," Heck said. "Now the EU is leading the world
down a dangerous path where decision-making will be based on
what might happen rather than on what has been proven. Under
pressure from anti-biotech forces, the EU is misleading poor
developing countries to focus scarce resources on biotech crops
proven to be safe and that will be processed into food and feed.
"Rather
than focus on commodity shipments, countries should be focusing
scarce resources on real biodiversity threats from invasive
species. Resources should be targeted at preventing biodiversity
catastrophes such as the introduction of zebra mussels into the
United States, rabbits and red fox into Australia, and the water
hyacinth in African freshwater ecosystems, to name just a few
examples."
To minimize
U.S. soybean trade disruption arising from implementation of the
BioSafety Protocol, ASA will encourage all soybean growers to
make several photocopies of each of their seed receipts as they
procure their 2004 soybean seed. As these seeds are planted,
make notes in the margins of the seed receipts to specify in
which field each soybean variety was used. Then at harvest time,
growers will need to do their best to match up a photocopy of
each appropriate seed receipt with every truckload of soybeans
delivered to the elevator.
"ASA
originally alerted its 25,000 members to the need for saving
copies of seed receipts several months ago, right after the
European Union published its new Traceability & Labeling
Regulations." Heck said, "Now we are informing all U.S. growers
about the need to copy seed receipts attesting to the origin of
every variety contained in each load we deliver."
On a
worldwide basis, biotech crops were planted on more than 167
million acres last year, including 90 million acres of soybeans.
More than 60 percent of soybeans in world trade have been
improved through modern biotechnology. These soybeans are
consumed directly by people in a variety of soy foods, or
processed into vegetable oil for cooking and protein-rich meal
for livestock feed.
Roundup
Ready Soybeans® have been approved for food and feed
use by government agencies in the United States, in the European
Union, in China and in 23 other countries where formal approval
is required for each new biotechnology-derived "genetic event"
prior to importation in commodity shipments.
The
Biosafety Protocol itself does not specifically require
countries to label biotech crops or to place labels on products
containing biotech ingredients, but requires shipping
documentation to accompany bulk commodities that may include
crops derived through biotechnology. This would serve to advise
the importing country that the shipment "may contain" biotech
varieties, and that the shipment is for processing into food and
feed products, not for planting.
As a result
of decisions reached this week in Malaysia, bulk commodity
exports will now have to go beyond the "may contain" language
and identify each and every unique genetic biotech event in a
shipment. Processed commodity products, such as soybean meal and
oil, are exempt from any and all requirements under the
Biosafety Protocol.
"The EU is
deciding the rules not only for its own citizens but for hungry
people in other nations around the world who do not have the
wherewithal to resist," Heck said. "Unfortunately, countries of
the world missed an opportunity this week to focus on real
issues that threaten biodiversity." |