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    Latest from UK farming press

    EU lifts ban on GM feed

    22 February 2011 | Updated: 25 February
    2011 9:55 am | By Jack Davies

    BRITISH farmers could soon be given
    access to GM animal feed after the EU
    voted to relax its zero-tolerance policy
    to contaminated feed being imported into
    Europe.

    It marks a step-change in the EU’s
    approach to GM, and comes following
    warnings of feed shortages and inflated
    prices, with importers increasingly wary
    of shipments being turned away from
    ports in the EU.

    Europe currently imports around 80 per
    cent of its animal feed, much of it from
    GM growing countries in North and South
    America.

    At a meeting this week, the EU’s
    Standing Committee on Food Chain and
    Animal Health (SCoFCAH) agreed to allow
    up to 0.1 per cent of non-EU approved GM
    in feed imports.

    Welcoming the decision, Scottish Liberal
    Democrat MEP George Lyon said: “It
    should help lower the costs of imported
    soya for hard pressed livestock farmers
    who are being hit by sharply rising feed
    costs.

    “Farmers in the UK import approximately
    2.2 million tonnes of soya every year
    and it is estimated by the industry that
    the zero tolerance threshold on imports
    was costing farmers an extra £50 per
    tonne which they can ill afford at this
    time.

    “These changes should help put UK and
    Scottish farmers in a more competitive
    position and reduce costs once the
    benefits feed through.”

    The NFU said the move was ‘a step in the
    right direction’ but warned more needed
    to be done to make it easier for
    importers.

    NFU director of policy Martin Haworth
    said: “The change only applies to the
    presence of material for which EU import
    licences have been applied, but not yet
    approved.

    “Increasingly companies are simply not
    bothering to apply for licences in the
    EU - particularly for maize - since the
    process is long and costly and the major
    markets are in Asia not Europe.”

    Mr Haworth also highlighted a clause
    which means imported GM will still have
    to be given the green light by the
    European Food Safety Authority, risking
    more delays and potentially preventing
    farmers taking full advantage of the
    change in the rules.

    The proposed change came in for heavy
    criticism from the anti-GM lobby this
    week, which warned it was the start of a
    slippery slope opening Europe’s doors to
    GM.

    Pete Riley of campaign group GM Freeze
    said: “EU member states have failed to
    respect the wishes of their citizens-
    the majority of whom remain opposed to
    GM crops entering the food chain.

    “Instead they have been swayed by the
    hyperbole of industry into weakening the
    GMO regulations.”

    The new rules will now be placed before
    the European Council and the Parliament
    and are likely to come into force in
    three months time if they both approve
    the plans.

    Readers' comments (6)
    Jamie | 22 February 2011 6:46 pm
    They are crazy. Today it's low level
    tolerance, tomorrow it's EVERYWHERE!

    Don't be puppets in this GMO game, come
    on, wake up to the reality!
    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this
    comment
    mudflap | 22 February 2011 8:07 pm
    that'll be the reality that we can't
    afford to feed our livestock!!
    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this
    comment
    riversider | 25 February 2011 1:18 pm
    They must be mad to let any GM
    contaminated feed into the UK. Farmeres
    lose out, livestock loses out, big
    American Business gets rich. I shall not
    be feeding any GM feed to my cattle.
    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this
    comment
    Beaky | 25 February 2011 2:21 pm
    When human food prices are low, somebody
    or something else pays the price.
    Considering only 10% of people's income
    nowadays goes on food (as opposed to 30%
    some years ago), it really is about time
    people understood that good food doesn't
    come cheap. Give farmers a decent price
    so that they can in turn give their
    animals a decent quality of life - and
    that includes proper non-GM feeds. There
    will be no turning back once GM foods
    get into the food chain.
    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this
    comment
    Newt | 25 February 2011 3:32 pm
    Beaky is right.

    We don't need cheaper feeds, we need a
    fair price for our produce.

    GM is only going to make a profit for
    those who own the genotype. If they get
    it right, they could end up owning the
    whole crop. If they get it wrong we'll
    all pay, because once a gene is in a
    species it is going to be extremely
    expensive to cull it out again and you
    can bet that those responsible will
    declare bankruptcy and run, leaving us
    to foot the bill.

    £50 a tonne for feed as opposed to
    paying for all your livestock to be
    slaughtered to stop a rogue gene getting
    into the human food chain?

    I'll pay the £50 a tonne, the only thing
    is, once the genes are out there they
    will affect us all, wether we fed GM
    feed or not. Just like BSE. Didn't the
    scientists say that bone meal was safe
    too????
    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this
    comment
    Anne Newstead | 25 February 2011 5:38 pm
    I will not knowingly eat anything with
    GM i n it. If that means no meat then so
    be it. Another cross for the farmers to
    bare. Give them a fair price for the
    real thing.

    #2
    This is a start and hopefully the good news gets better!

    Comment


      #3
      I copied the comments to just to give you
      the customer reaction to this news here.

      I know only those with strong views will
      bother to comment but still looks like the
      customer says no to any form of GM.

      Comment


        #4
        Not to disagree with you to much Ianben but being more specific to a
        North America definition of genetic modification, the European
        consumer reaction is to a very specific form of biotechnology in the
        form of genetic engineering/transgenics. Europe is an active user of
        other forms of biotechnology/non traditional plant breeding methods.

        Europe is also uses soybeans/soybean meal in livestock feed so again
        the European food system is not 100 % clean of genetic engineered
        crops. Includes drugs, yeast, other factors and again Europe use the
        full biotechnology spectrum to develop new products. The attitude
        what you don't know won't hurt you but know something and it will kill
        you.

        The discussion in Europe is about abventitious presence of GMO genes
        in feed that have been registered in other regions of the world using a
        regulatory of that region but not approved in Europe. Canada has a
        zero tolerance for unapproved biotech crops just the same as Europe.
        The suggestion is that low level presence of a genetic event that has
        gone through an accepted scientific review process in one country
        should allow at least some leaway for low level presense in another
        countrie's imports even though it had not gone through that countries
        full regulatory/political review process.

        Comment

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