Before the European Parliament voted today on the deregulation of new genetically modified crops, our team spent two days on the ground in Strasbourg.
Monday’s meeting of the Environment Committee (ENVI) already gave a hint of the direction the debate would take. Under the watchful eyes of numerous lobbyists from the agricultural and biotech industries, a compromise was rushed through that reduces transparency, weakens protection standards, and further increases the influence of patents on seeds.
Numerous committee members were replaced by alternates at the last minute, and key amendments were not put to a separate vote. Instead of an open political debate, the impression was one of a process designed primarily to conceal conflicts within the major political groups.
On Tuesday, we demonstrated in front of the Parliament alongside 200 farmers, beekeepers, breeders, environmental organizations, and consumer groups against the planned deregulation. Our team delivered the demands of more than 600,000 citizens from across Europe: Maintain labeling, ensure transparency, and limit patents on seeds!
Despite these warnings and despite continued strong public support for labeling and safety testing of new genetic engineering, the European Parliament voted today in favor of far-reaching deregulation.
Comment by Benedikt Haerlin, Coordinator of Save Our Seeds
Following today’s vote in the European Parliament, after a two-year transition period, there will no longer be any specific safety assessments, labelling requirements for food and animal feed, or traceability in the environment for most genetically modified crops. Exclusive patents can gradually undermine plant variety rights and their open-source rules regarding the free use of varieties for further breeding.
The genetic engineering lobby’s most recent successes at EU level in 1996 and 2008 have ultimately gone down in history as milestones in the public rejection of genetic engineering in food and agriculture. We will be working towards that outcome again this time. What today’s vote makes legally possible – the marketing of genetically modified crops without labelling and without further safety testing – has by no means been accepted by farmers and consumers.
Its the law, bro — but does it sell?
Over 90 per cent of the population wants new genetically modified organisms to be labelled and safety-tested just as the old GMOs. Today’s disregard for the wishes and concerns of the vast majority of the EU-population could therefore once again prove to be a decisive mistake. Save Our Seeds and many other organisations will continue to inform farmers and consumers – including the retail sector – which products contain GMOs. Clandestinity has never been a successful strategy for persuasion. The ‘GMO Brothers’ at Bayer, BASF, ChemChina-Syngenta and Corteva therefore still face the biggest hurdle to marketing their new, patent-protected genetically modified varieties.
Nevertheless, the deregulation process adopted today marks the failure of an enlightened, democratic debate on technology in Europe. It calls into question both the integrity of leading scientific institutions – which have championed the cause with preposterous arguments – and the ethics of politicians from almost all political groups in the European Parliament. Instead of honestly communicating the state of their knowledge and lack thereof, as well as their doubts, they have chosen to issue blank cheques for potential future innovations using semantically carefully crafted narratives. Using tricks that cannot be scientifically justified, a distinction has been forced through between supposedly ‘natural’ and less natural genetically modified products, a distinction that makes no reliable statement whatsoever about their respective risks.
The telling silence of politicians and established scientific bodies regarding the real intention of the international genetic engineering corporations – to bring future plant breeding under the patent control of their legal departments – looks just as bad on publicly funded science, which of course also benefits from this, as on politicians who, in the name of supposed competitiveness and innovation, are privatising intellectual property rights over seeds, curtailing citizens’ freedom of choice and jeopardising the protection of health and the environment.
Alternative truths from science?
This failure of democratic discourse on technology undermines the credibility of organised science and the already limited trust in the integrity of politics. Incidentally, the majority that voted in favour of this today in the European Parliament would not have been possible without the support of the far right.
However, at a time when a socially binding concept of truth faces enormous threats, this decision also constitutes an attack on our fundamental understanding scientific honesty. When semantic contortions such as ‘new genomic techniques’ – rather than genetic engineering – become the basis for revising the risk assessment involved and citizens’ right to self-determination, and when fear-free scientific discussion is no longer possible, Europe’s democracy has lost an important foundation for future decisions.
Commission goes viral: GM-microorganisms
Unfortunately, such decisions are likely to be on the agenda before the end of this year on a much more radical proposal for dismantling of the Genetic Engineering Act – one that poses a far greater threat to freedom of choice, the environment and public health. The EU Commission has moved ahead, and the Council and Parliament are currently negotiating its proposal to massively relax the rules on the release of genetically modified microorganisms (ranging from bacteria to fungi and viruses) into the environment!
Photo ©Annemarie Volling (AbL) — Save Our Seeds Team, Franziska Achterberg and Alina Banse in front of the European Parliament
Further information
Inf’OGM: La déréglementation des OGM/NTG adoptée à Strasbourg
IFOAM Organics Europe: Europe re-affirms commitment to produce without NGTs and warns of threats on European seed sovereignty
Friends of the Earth Europe: EU lawmakers scrap basic rights for consumers, breeder, food sector
Arche Noah: NGT Vote: European Parliament opens the floodgates to a wave of patents
Testbiotech: NGT plants: the EU fails to take the right decisions




