Saint Louis,
Missouri
February 23, 2004
The 25,000
producer-members of the American Soybean Association (ASA) today
welcomed the announcement that the government of the People’s
Republic of China has issued a final safety certificate for the
importation of soybeans and soybean products derived from
biotech-enhanced Roundup Ready® Soybean seedstock. This action
is based on two years of field and food safety tests in China
that have confirmed the safety, healthfulness and environmental
friendliness of Roundup Ready soybeans. China has been importing
Roundup Ready soybeans under a series of interim safety
certificates.
"China’s decision to issue final safety
certificates for Roundup Ready Soybeans is good news for U.S.
farmers, as well as for Chinese consumers who rely on imports of
high quality soybeans to be processed into cooking oil and
livestock feed," said ASA President Ron Heck, a soybean producer
from Perry, Iowa. "This action will help ensure a steady market
for U.S. soybeans, while helping stabilize meat, fish, egg, and
cooking oil prices for Chinese consumers."
First certified by the U.S. government in 1995,
and since then approved by 38 other countries, Roundup Ready
soybeans are the only biotech-enhanced soybean variety
commercially planted in the U.S. Last year, about 85 percent of
the soybeans in the U.S. were grown from Roundup Ready seed. On
a worldwide basis, more than 60 percent of soybeans in world
trade have been improved through modern biotechnology.
Within the last seven years, China, a genetic
center of origin for the soybean, has made a dramatic transition
from being a net soybean exporting country, to the largest
export market for U.S. soybeans. In 2003, U.S. soybean exports
to China totaled 10.9 million metric tons (400 million bushels)
worth $2.8 billion. This represented more than 35 percent of all
U.S. soy exports and more than 40 percent of China’s import
requirements.
"Today’s announcement covering soybeans and a
handful of biotech events approved for other crops also marks a
significant step toward universal acceptance of crop
biotechnology that is improving the environment today and will
help feed the world tomorrow," Heck said.
Biotech-enhanced soybeans have allowed farmers
greater flexibility in adopting conservation tillage practices
that save millions of tons of valuable top soil and reduce the
number of times U.S. farmers have to run equipment over their
fields, which saves millions of gallons of fuel. Biotech crops
also have allowed farmers to reduce the amount of insecticides
and pesticides applied to their fields, and use products that
are more environmentally friendly because they biodegrade more
quickly.
"In the past, ASA has expressed concern about the
willingness of China’s regulatory agencies to repeatedly move
the regulatory target for approval of Roundup Ready soybeans,"
Heck said. "So we are very pleased that today’s announcement
actually comes well before the scheduled April 20 expiration of
the interim safety certificate program."
"At times, U.S. soybean exports have faced issues
such as trade restrictions, import permit delays, confusion over
biotechnology regulations and problems with transparency," Heck
said. "This hurt U.S. soybean producers, and made life difficult
for major buyers of U.S. soybeans in China who need to be able
to operate knowing that they have a free and unencumbered flow
of soybeans from the United States," Heck added.
ASA has worked diligently to obtain meaningful
access for U.S. soybeans and soybean products in China’s World
Trade Organization accession agreement. During the past several
years, ASA has repeated called on the Administration and
Congress to insist that China’s political leadership honor and
enforce its commitment that access to the Chinese market for
U.S. soybean exports would not be restricted.
"ASA is very appreciative of the efforts of the
U.S. Trade Representative, the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, and President George W. Bush for
the persistent efforts that have brought about resolution of
this important issue," Heck said.
Last year in December, ASA signed a cooperation
agreement with representatives of the China Chamber of Commerce
of Import and Export of Foodstuffs, Native Produce & Animal
By-Products (CFNA) in support of continued U.S. soybean exports
to China. The agreement calls for a wide range of mutually
beneficial exchanges and activities, including the exchange of
delegations between ASA and CFNA.
"In 1982, long before China imported soybeans,
ASA producer-leaders decided to open an office in China to begin
building demand for U.S. soybeans," Heck said. "While U.S.
soybean farmers have greatly benefited from ASA’s work in China,
so have Chinese consumers. Today, imports of soybeans from the
United States allow China to keep meat and vegetable oil
supplied and prices under control for Chinese consumers."
"Obtaining a final safety certificate for Roundup
Ready soybeans has been one of the American Soybean
Association’s major goals for the past several years," Heck
said. "ASA views today’s announcement to be the result of
continued vigilance, and it demonstrates ASA’s willingness to
confront any efforts to restrict market access for U.S. soybean
farmers."
With a land area that is slightly smaller than
the U.S., China has a population of 1.3 billion, which is about
four and a half times as many people than living in the U.S. ASA
believes that China’s past and current decisions in support of
agricultural biotechnology signal China’s recognition that
modern biotechnology is an effective tool that will enable it to
better feed its people in a more environmentally sustainable
manner. |