Big Ag prevails as EU ministers surrender to pressure

Brus­sels, 14 March 2025 – The Coun­cil of Min­is­ters today reached an agree­ment on a posi­tion regard­ing the dereg­u­la­tion of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied (GM) plants. In the Com­mit­tee of Per­ma­nent Rep­re­sen­ta­tives (COREPER), the Pol­ish EU Pres­i­den­cy man­aged to secure a nar­row major­i­ty for its pro­pos­al of 19 Feb­ru­ary [1].

In July 2023, the Euro­pean Com­mis­sion pro­posed to exempt most plants engi­neered with new genet­ic mod­i­fi­ca­tion (GM) tech­niques such as CRISPR/Cas from EU GMO reg­u­la­tions. Require­ments such as risk assess­ment, GMO labelling and trace­abil­i­ty would no longer apply. Only the GM seeds would car­ry a “Cat. 1 NGT” label.

After exten­sive debates, the Coun­cil of Min­is­ters has now adopt­ed this pro­pos­al with only min­i­mal changes. This marks the begin­ning of a new phase in the EU leg­isla­tive process. Tri­logues with the Euro­pean Par­lia­ment and the Com­mis­sion can soon begin.

How­ev­er, in Feb­ru­ary 2024, the Euro­pean Par­lia­ment vot­ed for labelling and trace­abil­i­ty of CRISPR prod­ucts and called for a com­pre­hen­sive ban on patents. The Par­lia­ment and the Coun­cil must now agree on a com­mon text. At the end, both insti­tu­tions have to for­mal­ly approve that text in a vote.

Recent­ly, over 200 agri­cul­tur­al and envi­ron­men­tal organ­i­sa­tions protest­ed against the GMO dereg­u­la­tion.

Franziska Achter­berg, Head of Pol­i­cy and Advo­ca­cy at Save Our Seeds:

The min­is­ters have clear­ly caved to pres­sure from large multi­na­tion­al biotech com­pa­nies. By allow­ing untest­ed and unla­beled GM plants to be released into the envi­ron­ment and onto our plates, they are putting both peo­ple and nature at risk. Fur­ther­more, they are strip­ping con­sumers of their right to avoid GM food.

This law has only one winner—and many losers. Untest­ed, unla­beled, yet patent­ed GM crops and food will increase cor­po­rate mar­ket pow­er while under­min­ing the rights of farm­ers and con­sumers. It is now up to the mem­bers of the new­ly elect­ed Euro­pean Par­lia­ment to at least safe­guard the basic inter­ests of farm­ers, con­sumers and the envi­ron­ment from a com­plete sell­out to indus­try. [2]

While the EU is gear­ing up to dereg­u­late plants engi­neered with new GM tech­niques like CRISPR/Cas, com­pa­nies are increas­ing­ly turn­ing to Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence to accel­er­ate the genet­ic engi­neer­ing process and expand its pos­si­bil­i­ties [3].

Achter­berg added:

At a time when the use of arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence in genet­ic engi­neer­ing is sig­nif­i­cant­ly expand­ing both its poten­tial and its risks, the min­is­ters are about to aban­don all over­sight and effec­tive con­trol of its prod­ucts.

Con­tact: Franziska Achter­berg – Head of Pol­i­cy and Advo­ca­cy at Save Our Seeds, +32 498 362403,

Save Our Seeds is a cam­paign run by the Foun­da­tion on Future Farm­ing. Since 2002, it has suc­cess­ful­ly spear­head­ed efforts to avoid GMO con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of seeds and main­tain pre­cau­tion­ary GMO leg­is­la­tion at nation­al and EU lev­els. Cur­rent cam­paigns also include efforts to Stop Gene Dri­ves.

Notes to edi­tors:

[1] Sup­port­ed the com­pro­mise: Bel­gium, Cyprus, Czechia, Den­mark, Esto­nia, Fin­land, France, Greece, Ire­land, Italy, Latvia, Lithua­nia, Lux­em­bourg, Mal­ta, Nether­lands, Poland, Por­tu­gal, Spain and Swe­den. Did not sup­port: Aus­tria, Bul­gar­ia, Croa­t­ia, Ger­many, Hun­gary, Roma­nia, Slo­va­kia and Slove­nia.

[2] An Ipsos poll of 2021 shows that the major­i­ty (68%) of respon­dents who have heard of new GM tech­niques, such as CRISPR, want food pro­duced with these tech­niques labelled as GM.

[3] A recent report by Save Our Seeds shows that the con­ver­gence of AI and CRISPR/Cas could ampli­fy weak­ness­es of gene edit­ing — such as unin­tend­ed side effects — by adding known short­com­ings of gen­er­a­tive AI, includ­ing the ‘black box’ effect, hal­lu­ci­na­tions, and data dis­tor­tions.

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