Saint Louis, Missouri
September 21, 2007
The American Soybean
Association (ASA) is pleased that the European Food Safety
Authority (EFSA) has issued a positive safety opinion on the
LibertyLink® soybean (A2704-12) from
Bayer CropScience.
This is a critical regulatory milestone in the European Union
(EU) approval process that moves closer the commercialization of
an additional biotech-enhanced soybean seed trait for U.S.
producers.
Soybeans account for nearly 70 percent of the world’s protein
meal consumption, and 30 percent of the edible fats and oils
consumed worldwide. The European Union (EU) imports about 95
percent of the whole soybeans processed in the EU and about 70
percent of the soybean protein meal consumed in the EU. Soybean
protein meal is an important part of poultry, swine and other
livestock feeds in addition to soybeans having numerous other
consumer and industrial uses.
The first biotech-enhanced soybean seed was commercialized more
than a decade ago. With about 91 percent of the soybeans planted
in the United States this year being grown from Roundup Ready
seed varieties, herbicide tolerant seeds have become a standard
in U.S. farmer management systems to control weeds that compete
with crops for light, water, and nutrients. The LibertyLink
trait is resistant to Liberty®, a postemergence contact
herbicide that controls grass and broadleaf weeds, and will
provide a new in-crop herbicide option for soybean growers.
"U.S. soybean farmers welcome the development of new
biotech-enhanced soybean varieties and appreciate this positive
action taken by the EFSA," said ASA President John Hoffman, a
producer from Waterloo, Iowa. "The availability of a seed
variety that tolerates a different herbicide will promote market
competition and provide an additional in-crop weed control
option that can be an effective management tool to minimize the
selection for herbicide resistant weeds and enhance the
sustainability of U.S. soybean production."
"Herbicide-tolerant soybeans provide farmers with an
unprecedented weed management tool, which has led to increased
conservation tillage practices that reduce production costs,
lower fuel consumption, reduce run-off, and save irreplaceable
top soil," Hoffman said. "LibertyLink soybeans will provide U.S.
soybean farmers with an additional option in herbicide-tolerant
technology."
LibertyLink soybeans are fully approved for food, feed and
cultivation in the United States and Canada. The ASA has been
consulting closely with Bayer CropScience to ensure that
regulatory approvals also are being sought in all major soy
export markets that have biotech regulatory approval processes.
To date, LibertyLink soybeans are fully approved for importation
into Australia, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Taiwan and South
Africa, and for food use in Russia.
Bayer CropScience expects to receive full import approvals in
the EU, China and other key export countries prior to the
planned commercialization in 2009. Until the required approvals
are obtained, Bayer CropScience is implementing robust
stewardship practices to ensure that all seed and grain produced
during seed increase activities is contained and controlled
until the targeted commercial launch of the product in 2009.
"Timely overseas regulatory approvals are critical because
growers around the world have rapidly adopted new
biotech-enhanced seed varieties as they became available,"
Hoffman said. "U.S. growers look forward to this and several
other new biotech-enhanced soybean varieties now under
development that will offer important benefits to consumers,
growers, and the environment, ranging from healthy oil profiles
to increased yields to better weed control."
ASA is the policy advocate and collective voice of its 24,000
producer-members on domestic and international issues of
importance to all U.S. soybean farmers. |
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