January 16, 2004
By Kristina Merkner
Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung via
Checkbiotech.org
Agriculture Minister Künast presents strict
regulations on the cultivation and sale of genetically modified
crops and foods.
After months of negotiations, the German
government has agreed to allow the cultivation and sale of
genetically modified crops in Germany.
Calling the bill “a great success for consumers and farmers,“
Renate Künast, the minister for consumer protection, food and
agriculture, presented the main features of the new law on
Monday and said the cabinet would approve it next month.
Germany, where the pro-environmentalist Greens - Künast's party
- are part of the governing coalition, has long been considered
one of the most skeptical countries toward genetically modified
organisms, so-called GM crops. Künast indicated that the new law
could pave the way for more acceptance of them across the entire
European Union, which last month delayed a decision on lifting
its four-year-old moratorium on the authorization of new GM
products for import into the EU, although it has long allowed
some food ingredients containing small concentrations of GM
foods.
The German draft fulfills an EU requirement to set clear rules
on the cultivation of GM crops, and stipulates that GM foods
sold in Germany must be clearly labeled. “It's in the hands of
the consumers what ends up on their plates,” said Künast.
Consumer and environmental associations disagreed. Edda Müller,
a board member of the Federation of German Consumer
Organizations, was disappointed that the labeling requirement
did not apply to animal feed or to food served in restaurants,
schools and hospitals. “This means that practically 60 percent
to 70 percent of food containing GM organisms will bear no
label,“ she said.
Künast formerly opposed GM crops but was under pressure to
compromise with the Research and Economics ministries. She can,
however, claim as successes the labeling obligation and a
regulation whereby farmers whose conventional crops are
contaminated with GM organisms because of cross-pollination
between fields can claim compensation from GM farmers in their
area.
Fields on which GM crops are grown will have to be kept at a
minimum distance from fields for conventional crops, but since
cross-pollination cannot be ruled out and is difficult to trace,
all GM farmers within a prescribed distance will be liable if a
conventional farmer's crops are “contaminated” and can no longer
be sold as GM-free.
On other important aspects, though, the minister had to yield.
Farmers will not have to seek authorization for planting GM
crops in certain areas defined as “ecologically sensitive” - a
model supported by Künast. Neither did the minister succeed in
her determination to stop the use of tax money to develop new GM
varieties.
Whether Germany will now offer huge market potential to GM
producers is an open question. Polls show that, unlike in the
United States, most consumers in Europe are skeptical about
claims that GM foods pose no risk to their health or the
environment. Said a spokeswoman for the environmental group
Greenpeace, Corinna Hölzel: “GM food doesn't stand a chance on
the market.”
Farmers might also be deterred from cultivating GM crops because
the proposed compensation rules would make doing so “an
incalculable risk,” said Gerd Sonnleitner, the president of the
German Farmers' Association.
© Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung |