"Gmos are harmless, end of story"
19/05/2002
- Opinión
The United States wants the European Union to lift its 1998 moratorium
on the import of new genetically modified organisms. This is one-sided
free trading - as at the same time the US is adopting protectionist
measures to help its steel industry. The EC, far from resisting, is
doing its undemocratic best to help the US.
The United States declaration of unlimited war on terrorism was not
the only outcome of the 11 September attacks. Appealing to patriotism
also enabled President Bush to squeeze a bill through the House of
Representatives, by only 216 votes to 215, giving him trade promotion
(formerly called fast track) authority. If the Senate follows suit,
the executive will be entitled to negotiate international trade
agreements without interference from Congress, which will have no
power of amendment. Congress will have to accept or reject the texts
as they stand, and outright rejection is unlikely. Without such
authority, it is argued, US negotiators lack credibility, as their
partners will fear negotiated agreements may be vitiated by
Congressional amendments.
With Congress still to take its final decision, the ministerial
conference of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), held last November
in Doha, Qatar, was another slap in the face for the opponents of neo-
liberal globalisation and a success for the business lobby. It
launched a new round of comprehensive negotiations, called the Doha
Development Round, to take over from the Millennium Round that failed
in Seattle in December 1999. Of the areas it covered, the environment
is probably the most sensitive in the immediate future.
Mention of the environment in the final declaration of the Doha
conference was mainly due to pressure from the European Union, backed
by Japan, Norway and Switzerland. India was strongly opposed to it,
followed by most of the developing countries and the US. But the cost
of securing a mention of the environment was very high. This was
because of the inclusion of an important rider making the results of
future negotiations on compatibility between WTO rules and
multilateral environmental agreements binding only on countries that
have already signed MEAs - which is reason enough for all countries to
follow the example of the US and not sign, or renege. It was also
because, totally contradicting the stated aims, there is a risk of the
WTO gaining the upper hand over MEAs. And that is just what big
businesses, especially biotech firms, hope for.
Pascal Lamy, the European commissioner for trade, shares this
perspective. Before the signing of the Doha declaration, he wrote to
his friend Robert Zoellick, the US trade representative: "You have
informed me of your government's deep concern that Europe might use
the negotiations decided on in Doha to justify illegitimate barriers
to trade, particularly trade in biotechnological products and
application of the commercial clauses of present or future
multilateral agreements on biosecurity. As the European Commission's
negotiator, I am writing to assure you that will not be the case. I
can also assure you I shall not use the negotiations to change the
balance of rights and obligations within the WTO with regard to the
precautionary principle" (1).
The last sentence speaks volumes. It means that there is no question
of the EU calling for the precautionary principle to be strengthened,
no question of the EU demanding that the burden of proof in
biosecurity be reversed. So any country or group of countries not
wishing to import a given product (like the EU and hormone-treated
beef) will continue to be required to prove that the product is
dangerous. And the exporter will still be exempt from any obligation
to prove it is harmless. This was no doubt the return demanded by
Washington for its agreement to mention the environment in the
declaration.
The EU's capitulation on this issue may soon impact genetically
modified organisms (GMOs). Lamy's consideration for the US is not
entirely reciprocated. Barely a month after Doha, Zoellick announced
that the Bush administration was considering filing a complaint about
Europe's alleged delays in authorising imports of new GMOs, and its
directives about traceability and labelling.
The EU has effectively maintained a moratorium on the import of new
GMOs since 1998. In fact, the measures on traceability and labelling
put to the EU council and the European parliament last July, not yet
implemented, are the commission's chosen method of opening the door to
new imports. By enabling Europe's consumers to choose between products
that do or do not contain GMOs, the EU is attempting to make its
policy acceptable. But the US remains adamant: it is not prepared to
countenance a moratorium or rules on traceability and labelling. GMOs
are harmless. End of story (2).
At present France is the mainstay of the anti-GMO blocking minority in
the EU environment council. It is supported by Denmark (but that
country could change its approach with the new rightwing government),
Greece, Austria, Italy and Luxembourg. This minority is shaky, and
against a powerful opponent. On 6 November, just before the Doha
conference, 64 of the most influential American agricultural groups
and organisations (including Cargill, Monsanto, the Farm Bureau
Federation and the Grocery Manufacturers of America), representing
billions of dollars in exports, wrote to the secretaries of commerce
and agriculture, and to Ambassador Zoellick. Denouncing the
precautionary principle and the "illegitimate measures and other
technical barriers to trade" applied by the EU, they demanded the
government no longer allow the WTO agreements on sanitary and
phytosanitary measures and on technical barriers to trade to be
flouted.
US patience wearing out
The American agricultural producers' lobby, backed in Washington by
the government machinery, claims the EU moratorium has cost $300m in
lost profits on maize alone. It is pushing harder because of the
alluring prospect of an American monopoly in all GMO agricultural
products. Discouraged by protest movements, the big European biotech
firms have abandoned agriculture for pharmaceuticals (3). Speaking in
January to a British farming conference in Oxford, US agricultural
secretary Ann Veneman claimed that US exports were always based on
sound science: "Unfortunately in Europe there is now a competing
concept called the precautionary principle, which seems to rest on the
premise of the mere existence of theoretical risk. [It] could easily
block some of the most promising new agricultural products, especially
those based on biotechnology." Her under-secretary of state, Alan
Larson, appointed economic adviser to Colin Powell, went further. A
week later in Brussels, he warned that America's "patience was wearing
out".
The pressure to take the GMO issue to the WTO is mounting. Invoking
the earlier judgment against France for its refusal to import British
beef during the mad-cow crisis, Larson has proposed the commission
refer France and the other countries in the blocking minority to the
Court of Justice in Luxembourg: "We have all our options open. This is
an issue that presidents, premiers and chancellors must understand is
very important to us. Sometimes, if there's behaviour that's both
inappropriate and illegal, you've got to confront it. That's the only
way you're going to change it" (4).
In January Zoellick sent 14 pages of instructions to US ambassadors
throughout the world setting out the arguments to be used in the event
of shilly-shallying by WTO member governments, especially the Fifteen.
The EU's proposed measures on the traceability and labelling of GMOs,
he claims, "are not workable or enforceable, would be very expensive
to implement, and would not achieve the stated objectives. [They
would] unduly impair trade [and apply] to products that have already
been approved for use" - approved by the American authorities, that
is. "How will the EU ensure that the authorisation is based on science
and not on politics" (5)? This nightmare scenario - which is how the
US seems to view democratic decision-making - can be avoided if the US
plays its cards right. And the European Commission is there to help it
to do so.
On a visit to Washington last October, David Byrne, commissioner for
health and consumer protection, anticipated the moratorium would be
lifted at the European Council in Barcelona in March. Lamy, on a later
trip to the US capital, was more realistic. Swift action on the
approval of new GMOs was impossible in the current political climate,
he said. The situation would be more propitious "later this year".
After the French and German elections?
Tony Van der Haegen, minister-counsellor for agriculture, fisheries
and consumer affairs in the European Commission's delegation to the
US, seems also to see himself as counsellor to the Americans. He is
certainly prepared to let them know what he thinks of his own
employer. Van der Haegen has described the EU procedure for taking
decisions on the import of new GMOs as an untenable position. This top
EU official added that if the US were to file a complaint with the
WTO, we would lose. But it is not enough for Van der Haegen to point
out the weaknesses in the position he is supposed to defend: he has
also explained that the Americans would be ill-advised to file a
complaint on traceability and labelling with the WTO, because, if it
lost, "it would further undermine confidence in the WTO among the US
Congress and the public, and if it won, the EU would never be able to
comply for political reasons. The ensuing dispute would be worse than
the beef hormone case"(6).
The Bush administration is fine-tuning its GMO strategy on the
strength of this well-informed advice, bearing in mind elections in
France and Germany. It does not want a politically explosive WTO case
to become an election issue that could fuel the campaigns of anti-
biotech forces within the green parties (7). But it is determined to
get its own way in the end * Vice-President of Attac France. Author of
Remettre l'OMC ` sa place, Mille et Une Nuits, Paris, 2001, and, with
Martin Wolf, Pour ou contre la mondialisation libirale, Grasset,
Paris, 2002
(1) Letter from Lamy to Zoellick, Doha, 14 November 2001, quoted in
Inside U.S. Trade, Arlington, vol 19, no 4, 23 November 2001.
(2) The products targeted by these proposals include chicory, maize, soya, tomatoes, soya oil, corn oil and rapeseed oil, corn syrups and starches, additives, and animal feed, but not products derived from animals fed on GMOs.
(3) See Le Monde, 20-21 January 2002.
(4) Quoted in Chris Rugaber, "EU leaders summit in March may decide on lifting of GMO moratorium, officials say", International Trade Reporter, Washington, vol 19, no 2, 10 January 2002.
(5) Zoellick's instructions to US ambassadors can be found on the Inside U.S. Trade website under the headline "US criticizes EU biotech rules at WTO", document source USTR, document dated January 2002.
(6) Quoted in Chris Rugaber, "US to analyze EU biotech rules, plans WTO submission", International Environment Reporter, Washington, vol 24, no 25, 5 December 2001.
(7) See "US pushes EU to restart biotech approvals, loosen regulations", Inside U.S. Trade, vol 19, no 51, 21 December 2001. Translated by Barry Smerin. SUSAN GEORGE
Le Monde diplomatique
(2) The products targeted by these proposals include chicory, maize, soya, tomatoes, soya oil, corn oil and rapeseed oil, corn syrups and starches, additives, and animal feed, but not products derived from animals fed on GMOs.
(3) See Le Monde, 20-21 January 2002.
(4) Quoted in Chris Rugaber, "EU leaders summit in March may decide on lifting of GMO moratorium, officials say", International Trade Reporter, Washington, vol 19, no 2, 10 January 2002.
(5) Zoellick's instructions to US ambassadors can be found on the Inside U.S. Trade website under the headline "US criticizes EU biotech rules at WTO", document source USTR, document dated January 2002.
(6) Quoted in Chris Rugaber, "US to analyze EU biotech rules, plans WTO submission", International Environment Reporter, Washington, vol 24, no 25, 5 December 2001.
(7) See "US pushes EU to restart biotech approvals, loosen regulations", Inside U.S. Trade, vol 19, no 51, 21 December 2001. Translated by Barry Smerin. SUSAN GEORGE
Le Monde diplomatique
https://www.alainet.org/es/articulo/106141
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