Could there be relaxed rules for gene-editing?
22 Jan 2018 --- The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has given the first indication of how it will classify foods and crops derived from new genetic engineering techniques which should largely be exempt from EU laws. However, individual countries can step in to regulate them if they wish.
Mute Schimpf, food and farming campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe said: "Farmers and consumers across the EU expect that any new approach to producing food and crops should be fully tested to make sure they are safe for the public and the environment.They will be counting on the European Court of Justice to not uphold this opinion, and instead makes sure that all new genetically modified foods and crops are properly regulated."
The ECJ is expected to make its final ruling in the coming months. The case was referred to the EU court by the French Conseil d'État after French organizations including Les Amis de la Terre/Friends of the Earth France had filed it at the national level.
Corporate Europe Observatory's agriculture campaigner Nina Holland added: “The safety of this new generation of GM crops remains completely untested and must therefore not be exempted from existing safety rules. Our common interest in food safety, farmers' rights and protecting the environment must come before the biotech industry's interests.”
Scientists, consumer groups and NGOs have called for this new generation of GM products to be regulated under existing laws. Public opinion surveys in the EU have consistently shown a lack of appetite for GM products.
On the other hand, there is an argument from biotech industries that claim gene editing-type alterations can happen naturally through evolution.
The current EU GMO Directive does not apply to organisms obtained through certain techniques of genetic modification, such as mutagenesis ("the mutagenesis exemption").
“Unlike transgenesis, mutagenesis does not, in principle, entail the insertion of foreign DNA into a living organism. It does, however, involve an alteration of the genome of a living species. The mutagenesis techniques have made it possible to develop seed varieties with elements resistant to a selective herbicide,” says the Court of Justice of the European Union.
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