News
Releases

Markos Kyprianou
No.
38/05
April 15, 2005
BT-10: EU REQUIRES
CERTIFICATION OF US EXPORTS TO STOP UNAUTHORISED GMO FROM
ENTERING EU
European Union Member States today voted
in favor of an EU Commission proposal to adopt an emergency
measure requiring imports of corn gluten feed and brewers
grain from the United States to be certified as free of
the
GMO Bt10 which is not authorized in the US or Europe.
Corn gluten feed and brewers grain are the imported products
considered most likely to be contaminated.
EU
Health and Consumer Protection Commissioner Markos
Kyprianou said: "This is a targeted measure
which is necessary to uphold EU law, maintain consumer confidence
and ensure that the unauthorized GMO Bt10 cannot enter the
EU. Imports of maize products which are certified as free
of Bt10 will be able to continue, but at the same time we
cannot and will not allow a GMO which has not gone through
our rigorous authorization procedures to enter the EU market.
This measure is designed to affect trade as little as possible."
The emergency measure specifies that consignments of corn
gluten feed and brewers grain from the USA can only be placed
on the EU market if they are accompanied by an analytical
report by an accredited laboratory which demonstrates, based
on a suitable and validated method, that the product does
not contain Bt10.
EU Member States are responsible for controlling the imports
entering each EU country, preventing any contaminated consignments
from being placed on the market and for random sampling
and analysis of products already on the market. Business
operators importing feed from the USA are responsible for
ensuring that they are certified as free of Bt10, in accordance
with the principle in EU
food law that operators are responsible for the safety
of the food or feed that they place on the market.
According to current information from the US authorities
and the European food industry, food products in the EU
are not affected and they are therefore not included in
the scope of the emergency measure at this stage. However,
the measure agreed today requires the Member States to monitor
whether GM food products are present on their market, whether
these have been contaminated by Bt10 and to inform the Commission.
The Commission is actively monitoring the situation and
will consider additional measures on food if the evidence
requires it.
The inadvertent export of the unauthorized GMO Bt10 was
first notified to the European Commission by the US authorities
on March
22. The vote was taken today in an emergency meeting
of the Standing
Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health, made
up of representatives of the EU Member States and the European
Commission. The measure will now be adopted by the Commission
and will enter into force when the written procedure expires
early next week. The measure will be reviewed by the Commission
by the end of October 2005.
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
