EU COMMISSION
SEEKS CLARIFICATION ON BT10 FROM US AUTHORITIES AND SYNGENTA
The European Commission has
written to the US authorities and to the biotechnology company
Syngenta requesting clarification of the situation regarding
the unauthorized genetically
modified maize Bt10. According to the information received
to date from the US authorities and from Syngenta, the developer
of Bt10, up to 10 kg. of Bt10 seed may have been exported
inadvertently as Bt11 for research purposes to Spain and
France. The resulting materials have all been destroyed.
In addition, the Commission is informed that an estimated
1,000 metric tons of Bt10 food and feed products may have
entered the EU through the Bt11 export channels since 2001,
the date from which the inadvertent release of Bt10 started.
At a meeting yesterday with representatives of Syngenta,
officials of the European Commission were informed that
Bt10 included the gene conferring resistance to the antibiotic
ampicillin.
EU Health
and Consumer Protection Commissioner Markos
Kyprianou said: "The European Commission deplores
the fact that a GMO which has not been authorized through
the EU’s comprehensive legislative framework for GMOs, nor
by any other country, has been imported into the EU, and
we are writing to the US authorities asking them to guarantee,
by taking the appropriate measures, that present and future
exports of maize to the EU do not contain GMOs which are
not authorized for the EU market, including Bt10. This case
again shows the importance of the European Union’s comprehensive
framework for traceability and labeling of GMOs."
EU Environment
Commissioner Stavros
Dimas said: “In order to avoid any adverse effect
on human and animal health or the environment
of such an accidental release, the Commission has asked
Member States to carry out appropriate control measures
to stop Bt10 entering their territory. Member States should
also notify the state of play regarding past or current
national experimental releases of Bt11 and implement any
necessary monitoring and surveillance measures in the surrounding
areas where these releases took place.”
The Commission was first informed by the US Mission to the
European Union on 22 March about an inadvertent release
in the US of a non-authorized genetically modified maize
line called Bt10. The Commission informed the Member States
without delay via the Rapid
Alert System for food and feed. Moreover, the Commission
has asked the US Administration for the full safety information
about Bt10 at its disposal without delay, including the
full risk assessments upon which it is based as well as
for an urgent audit and an official view as to the quantities
exported, including the channels they may have taken in
the EU.
The Commission has also asked Syngenta, the developer of
the Bt10 crop, to release the full information about the
molecular characterization of Bt10 and its distinction from
Bt11, as well as the specific detection method and adequate
reference materials to trace Bt10. The Commission has also
asked Syngenta to confirm that all Bt10 plantings and seed
stock in the US have been destroyed or isolated for further
destruction. Syngenta has committed to provide this information
next week.
The US Government has given reassurance that no food, feed
or environmental concerns are associated with the inadvertent
release of this non-authorized genetically modified crop,
based on the fact that the Bt protein in Bt10 is similar
to the one in Bt11, which is fully authorized in the US
and which the EU has authorized for use in food and feed.
However, the US authorities did not inform the Commission
that Bt10 contains, contrary to Bt11, the gene conferring
resistance against the antibiotic ampicillin. It was only
on the 31st of March that this information was given officially
to the Commission by Syngenta. According to the advice of
the European Food Safety
Authority, the ampicillin resistance gene should not
be present in crops grown commercially. However, according
to Syngenta, this gene is inactive in Bt10.
Further Contact Information
Press and Media Relations
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
European Union - Delegation of the
European Commission to the United States
2300 M Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037
Telephone: (202) 862-9500 Fax: (202) 429-1766