EU Countries Set To Vote On French, Greek Biotech Corn Bans
February 13 2009 - 1:31PM
Dow Jones News
European Union governments next week will begin to tackle the
controversial issue of whether to force France and Greece to allow
planting of a genetically modified corn developed by U.S. biotech
giant Monsanto Co. (MON).
The European Commission, the E.U.'s executive arm, has
recommended the French and Greek bans on planting the Monsanto corn
be overturned because the countries don't have scientific evidence
indicating the crops are harmful.
The Monsanto corn - known as MON 810 - is the only biotech plant
that can be grown in Europe.
A committee of experts from the governments will vote Monday on
the commission's proposal. If the governments are divided, the
commission's proposal must be voted on by environment ministers
when they gather March 2.
The ministers in the past have rejected commission efforts to
overturn national bans enacted by Austria and Hungary. Most
observers expect they will do so again, out of respect for the
national autonomy of the E.U. governments - although they say the
votes will be close and the ministers could remain deadlocked.
In that case the decision would return to the commission, which
would likely approve its own proposal.
"There is a high-level clash between the two institutions, the
European Council on the one side and the commission on the other,"
said Marco Contiero of Greenpeace, which opposes commission efforts
to lift the bans.
The French government this week defended its ban after a report
by the French food safety agency, made public by French daily Le
Figaro, found no risk to human health from the Monsanto genetically
modified corn. French officials said the ban was still necessary to
prevent the biotech corn from contaminating other fields.
-By Matthew Dalton, Dow Jones Newswires; +32 2 741 1487;
matthew.dalton@dowjones.com