France and Germany seek to break GMO deadlock

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BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Agricultural powerhouses France and Germany sought on Monday to break the deadlock that has kept genetically modified crops out of most of Europe, saying rules must be changed to ease their approval.

"This authorization process of GMOs is highly unsatisfactory and worrying, it cannot stay like this," German Agriculture Minister Horst Seehofer told reporters on arriving for a meeting of EU farm ministers.

By Jeremy Smith

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Agricultural powerhouses France and Germany sought on Monday to break the deadlock that has kept genetically modified crops out of most of Europe, saying rules must be changed to ease their approval.

"This authorization process of GMOs is highly unsatisfactory and worrying, it cannot stay like this," German Agriculture Minister Horst Seehofer told reporters on arriving for a meeting of EU farm ministers.

"One commissioner says it's okay and another says it's not. (It's not acceptable) that we politicians decide according to a majority and current mood. This is not how we can deal with it."

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The EU has not approved any new GMOs for growing since 1998, in large part because of huge public resistance to what are sometimes called "Frankenstein foods."

At present, EU biotech policy involves some five or six departments of the executive European Commission, who can often be at odds.

But with international grain prices soaring and supply shortages being faced by the EU's livestock and animal feed sectors, pressure has been rising for the Commission to do something about the speed at which the EU approves new GMOs.

French Agriculture Minister Michel Barnier echoed Seehofer's comments, saying time might be needed to review the process.

"There is a very high public sensitivity (over GMOs), a lot of fears," he said. "And we don't want to limit imports."

"We have to take time to put procedures into place that can't be challenged," he told reporters. "I back my German colleague that we have to take time at European level."

"NO COMPROMISE"

An internal study published by Commission agriculture experts in June said the EU took a minimum of 2.5 years, and often much longer, to complete new GMO authorisations compared with an average of 15 months in the United States.

The other main issue is that since EU law does not give a tolerance threshold for the accidental presence of unauthorised GMOs that have been approved in exporter countries, trade flows can be disrupted if an EU-bound cargo is found to contain them.

In the past, that has resulted in temporary import bans that are a result of what are known as "asynchronous authorisations."

For the Commission's agriculture unit, this is a big problem. However, its food safety department, responsible for the temporary bans, is keen to keep unauthorised GMOs out of the EU food chain with a "no compromise" policy -- but has also suggested reaching agreements with exporter countries aiming at better coordination between approval processes and rules.

"It is obvious that the problems of asynchronous approvals will be increasing and we will face huge problems in the agricultural sector," EU Agriculture Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel told a news conference.

"To postpone any new approvals will have dramatic consequences. The production of meat will move out of Europe and then we will have to import meat (from animals that are) fed with GMO products. So we will be eating it anyway," she said.

(Additional reporting by Yves Clarisse, Ilona Wissenbach, editing by Michael Roddy)