St. Louis, Missouri
May 10, 2006
On behalf of its 25,000 U.S.
soybean producer-members, the
American Soybean Association
(ASA) is outraged by the conclusions adopted today by the
European Commission on the trade impact European Union (EU)
Traceability & Labeling laws for biotechnology-derived products
have had on exports of U.S. agricultural products.
"The EU's biotech
labeling and tracing rules have had a significant negative
effect on U.S. exports of food and agricultural products to the
EU," said ASA President Bob Metz, a soybean producer from West
Browns Valley, S.D. "For the report to say that the rules have
had a positive effect by providing relevant information,
consumer choice and safety guarantees is nothing short of a
whitewash and a betrayal of the very consumers the EU claims to
care about. We are amazed that the Commission would write such
fiction when market realities and trade numbers tell a very
different story."
The EU first
implemented mandatory labeling regulations in 1997, requiring
foods that contain biotech ingredients to be labeled. Because EU
consumers perceive biotech labels as health warnings, European
food companies and dozens of major food manufacturers outside
Europe who market their products in the EU, choose to
reformulate their products or find new, non-U.S. sources of
supply in order to avoid labeling their products as biotech.
For example,
because soybean oil must be labeled, despite the fact that no
detectable DNA from a biotech soybean is in the oil, EU
processors moved away from U.S. soybeans. As a result, the value
of U.S. exports of soybeans and soybean products fell by 65
percent between 1997, when the first biotech labeling rules for
food went into effect, and 2004, from $2.5 billion to $874
million. Total U.S. exports of products falling within the scope
of the EU regulations have dropped from $4.2 billion in 1996 to
$1.6 billion in 2004.
"Most EU food
companies have expressed their confidence in the safety of
biotechnology," Metz said. "Nevertheless, they have made clear
that they are doing everything possible to avoid having to put a
biotech label on their products."
"The cost of
complying with labeling and traceability rules drives up prices
and makes U.S. producers of corn, soybeans and processed
products less competitive," Metz said. "Unlike conventional
trade barriers, labeling requirements rarely stop products at
the border. Rather, they affect demand for imported products by
causing food companies and feed compounders to reformulate their
products or seek new sources of supply, and retailers to switch
to food products that do not contain biotech ingredients."
The effect is even
more evident when individual product categories are examined.
Comparing U.S. exports to the EU between 1997 and 2004 for nine
categories of processed products shows that exports of the five
categories of products that are unlikely to contain biotech
ingredients increased by an average of 46 percent over the
period, while exports of the four categories most likely to
contain biotech ingredients decreased by an average of 36
percent.
"U.S. farmers and
food companies are losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year
in lost sales due to the EU's trade-restrictive and non-science
based biotech labeling and tracing rules," Metz concluded. "We
believe the time has come for the United States Government to
mount a WTO-challenge against these rules. Doing so would expose
them for what they are - discriminatory trade barriers that have
nothing to do with health or safety and that have actually
decreased consumer choice."
For more
information about the impact the EU Traceability & Labeling laws
have had on exports of U.S. agricultural products, see ASA's T&L
Trade Effects Paper available at:
www.soygrower.com/eutl/.
The American
Soybean Association is the policy, domestic marketing, new uses,
research and international marketing advocate of the U.S.
soybean farmer. ASA is a membership organization representing
26,000 soybean producers. It's mission is to improve U.S.
soybean farmer profitability. |