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EU farm chief defends higher GM content in organic produce
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: January 24, 2006 08:00AM

www.checkbiotech.org ; www.raupp.info ; www.czu.cz

Europe?s farm chief defended her plans to permit more genetically modified
(GMO) content into organic farming on Monday, saying it would be too costly
for farmers to achieve higher purity in their organic produce, January 2006
by Jeremy Smith.

Questioned about her draft law that would allow products with up to 0.9
percent of GMO content to retain a label of "EU organic," EU Agriculture
Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel said the recommended labeling threshold
was a realistic one.

"It?s a standard threshold in the regulation," she told a news conference,
referring to the 0.9 percent label level that is already enshrined in
current EU law on biotech food and feed.

"We live in the real world. The lower we go (on a threshold), the more
expensive it will be for organic producers. We have to find the right
balance," she said.

Since some organic farmers might struggle financially to ensure their
produce met higher purity standards, they would then not be able to sell
that produce at the higher premium that organic items usually command -- and
so lose income.

Fischer Boel?s proposed organic regulation, now being considered by EU
agriculture ministers, would still make it illegal to use GMOs in organic
farming knowingly. The 0.9 percent level refers to accidental or unavoidable
contamination.

"The Commission has held firm on this so far and there are no signs of them
moving," one EU diplomat said.

"If you have a threshold for non-GM produce ... it?s another step to say
that we?ll have a different threshold for organic. It?ll be a major issue
for some member states as this gets debated over the months," he said.

Environmental groups are outraged by the proposal, with one recently
attacking it as the "thin end of a wedge which will allow the creeping
contamination of organic food across Europe."

"Should GM contamination enter the organic food chain, organic farmers will
necessarily be economically damaged," the International Federation of
Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) said in a statement.

"There has not been, and will not be, any tolerance at all for GMO
contamination of organic products," it said, adding that the EU had a duty
to ensure that all farmers who wanted to stay GMO-free were properly
protected in the event of contamination.

In the EU-25, the amount of organic farmland is around 5.7 million hectares,
or some 3.5 percent of its total agricultural area. Around 175,000 farms are
now run organically.

[www.heraldnewsdaily.com]

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