GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD

Description:

Title: Genetically modified crops in the US Author: Allstate Last modified by: Stuart Created Date: 4/4/2003 1:03:26 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:621
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: Alls60
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD


1
GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD
  • by
  • Mary Figueredo
  • Carlos Guzman
  • Carmen Huzum
  • Agnes Pawelkowska

2
What is GM Plant?
  • A GM plant contains a gene or genes which have
    been artificially inserted instead of the plant
    acquiring them through pollination.

3
GM CROPSSourceColorado State University
4
GM Crop ProductionArea by Country
Country Area Planted in 2000 (Millions of Acres) Crops
USA 74.8 Soybean, Corn, Canola and Cotton
Argentina 24.8 Soybean, Corn, and Cotton
Canada 7.4 Soybean, Corn, and Cotton
(Source ISAAA Briefs) (Source ISAAA Briefs) (Source ISAAA Briefs)
5
Future Crops Helping the Environment and Food
Supply
  • Golden Rice
  • Plant Based Vaccines
  • Coffee and Tea
  • Tobacco
  • Improved TurfGrass for Lawns and Recreational
    Areas

6
Looking Forward
  • What are the issues supporting and opposing GM
    foods?
  • What are the positions of the US and Europe?
  • Where does the WTO stand on this?
  • Proposed solutions to this trade dispute

7
Genetically modified crops in the US
8
Benefits of biotechnology from the US perspective
(interests groups)
  • Benefits for US farmers
  • -GM crops offer prospects of reducing input
    costs or making planting more flexible
  • -technology allows farmers to reduce their use
    of chemical pesticides (more environment
    friendly practices)
  • Benefits for US consumers
  • -GM food improves freshness and taste
  • -GM food enriches nutrition
  • -GM food decreases allergencity and lowers fat
    content
  • Benefits for the rest of the world
  • -technology holds promise for enhancing
    agricultural productivity and for improving
    nutrition In developing countries
  • - distribution problem can be resolved by
    graining GM crops in poor countries (overcome
    the world hunger).

9
The US government and the GM products
  • George W. Bush and his anti-regulatoryleaning
    (There are no limits on what responsible
    biotechnology can bring to America and the
    world.
  • Biotechnology provisions in the 2002 Farm Bill
  • -a biotechnology and agricultural trade program
    ,aimed at barriers to the export of the US
    products through biotechnology (section
    3209)
  • -competitive grants for biotechnology risk
    assessment research (section 7210)
  • -agricultural biotechnology research and and
    development for developing countries (section
    7505)
  • -a program of public education on the use of
    biotechnology in producing food for human
    consumption (section 10802)

10
The US Regulatory oversight in Biotechnology
  • The Agencies primarily responsible for regulating
    biotechnology in the US are
  • -the US Department of Agriculture(USDA)
  • -Environmental Protection Agency(EPA)
  • -the Food and Drug Administration(FDA)
  • Products are regulated according to their
    intended use, with some products being regulated
    under more than one agency.
  • The guiding principle is that GMF are
    substantially equivalent to conventional foods,
    therefore existing regulations for approving
    foods are appropriate and adequate.
  • Labeling with respect to GM content is not
    required in the US, except where there is a
    significant difference between the conventional
    and the GMF.

11
Skepticism over GM products
  • Europeans oppose GMF (dangers to human health or
    the environment)
  • Europeans call GMF- Frankenfood
  • EU countries fight against the biotechnology
    process
  • Europeans are scare to death of GMF- bad
    experience with contamined food-mad cow disease

12
Risks and controversies surrounding GMF
  • Safety----- potential human health impact
  • ------potential environmental impact
  • Access and intellectual property
  • - domination of world food production by a few
    companies
  • -increasing dependence on industrialized nation
    by developing countries
  • Biopiracy---foreign exploitation of natural
    resources
  • Ethics-------violation of natural organisms
    intrinsic values
  • Society------new advances may be skewed to
    interest to reach countries.

13
Current Legislation in the EU on GMOs
  • EU legislation on GMOs has been in place since
    1990
  • -Directive 90/220/EEC
  • -Directive 2001/18/EC
  • Procedure for the approval of introducing on the
    market of GMF
  • -Member State, Scientific Committees,
    Commission, Council of Ministers
  • -public information
  • Statistics
  • -until 1998 18 GMOs applications have
    authorized in the EU
  • 2 cases still not implemented by the Member
    State.
  • -since Oct.1998, no further authorization
  • European Food Authority- the main organization
    for GMOs approval

14
Trade disputes between the EU and the US
  • 1998 the EU banned imports of all new GMF
  • Precautionary Principle- violation of WTO rules
  • High priced food fight between US and EU
    involving GMF
  • The US wants to file a case at the WTO against EU
    restrictions over GMF (pressure from US
    agribusiness)

15
International Rules for GMOs
  • The World Trade Organization (WTO).
  • - Food safety, technical barriers to trade,
    and intellectual property rights
    protection.
  • The United Nations Biosafety Protocol (BSP).
  • - Biodiversity and non-scientific
    concerns.

16
The Biosafety Protocol (BSP) Provides that
  • An Advanced Informed Agreement (AIA) between
    exporting country and importing country is
    require for living GM organisms.
  • An importing country may refuse the GM shipment
    if there are undue risks identified through a
    science-based risk assessment.
  • Countries may consider socio-economic factors
    in their reviews.
  • A precautionary principlemay be applied to
    block GM imports which could be harmful to
    biological diversity without complete scientific
    certainty.

17
WTO Agreements
  • The Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
    Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
  • -Establishes rules and procedures to ensure that
    measures address health concerns.
  • The Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade
    (TBT)
  • - Establishes rules and procedures to develop
    standards, technical regulations, and assessment
    procedures
  • The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects on
    Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)
  • -Domestic regulatory regimes pertaining to
    intellectual property must provide protection to
    goods produced using biotechnology.

18
WTO Agreement Provisions
  • Permit national standards or regulations of
    commodities in international trade and the
    adoption or enforcement of measures necessary to
    protect health (Articles XI and XX (b)).
  •  
  • Require that regulations should be based on the
    WTOs principle of non-discrimination (PND)
    whereby there is a distinction between products
    and processing methods. All like-products are
    to be treated the same regardless of the
    production and processing methods.
  • Permit under specific circumstances, countries
    may legitimately violate the PND in order to meet
    domestic concerns or goals.

19
Applicable Rules under SPS and TBT
Agreement Exemption from PND Requirements
SPS Health risk -A scientific basis -A risk assessment
TBT Process and Production methods (PPMs) alter final good GM product is no longer like its non-GM counterpart
20
Recommendations
  • Seek full harmonization, or further cooperation
    and coordination concerning biotechnology and the
    development of labeling regimes aiming at
    achievement of a uniform regulatory framework.
  • Try to prevent the capture and capricious use of
    administrative procedures relating to GM crops
    and food products and make this a high priority.
  • Pursue a consistent coordinated approach to
    trade-related aspects of intellectual property
    rights. This is also important.
  • Use different mechanisms such as regional
    agreements, memoranda of understanding, mutual
    recognition agreements, formal dialogues and
    joint research projects to decrease bilateral
    regulatory barriers to GM food trade.

21
Conclusions
  • The WTO has no mechanism to allow the imposition
    of trade barriers directly in response to
    consumer or environmental groups asking for
    protection.
  • Governments have attempted to use the SPS and TBT
    to justify the imposition of trade barriers but
    GM-foods do not appear to pass either the food
    safety hazard test or the unlike product test
    required to put trade barriers in place in
    violation of the PND.

22
Conclusions (cont.)
  • The means for dealing with consumer concerns
    (labeling, traceability, and product segregation
    in supply chains) will impose considerable costs
    on exporters.
  • Exporters can be expected to resist strict import
    regimes and to have a high degree of interest in
    the type of import regimes and regulations that
    may arise.
  • Developing countries feel particularly vulnerable
    given their low level of technical capability in
    the complex areas of food safety, environmental
    sustainability, and supply-chain monitoring.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com