In a similar WTO case, the U.S. prevailed against Europe’s ban on
hormone-treated U.S. beef. Yet while the U.S. “won” the beef-hormone
dispute <
in 1999, Europe has still not opened its markets to U.S. beef. The beef
hormone and GE food cases show that in a global market, the U.S. will
have
more success selling its agricultural products by focusing on providing
food
that global consumers want to buy, rather than trying to shove whatever
farmers produce down foreign throats regardless of consumer demand.
The Bush Administration’s attempts to bully the world into eating
unwanted
GE food through its aggressive trade practices will only further cement
global consumers’ choice to avoid GE food from the U.S., and thus
further
harm U.S. farm and food export interests. We regret the course the
Administration has taken in pursuing this global food fight, and suggest
that the interests of Monsanto and other GE crop producers should no longer
dictate our policies on food trade or food production. Instead, policy
should be aimed toward providing Americans and our export customers with
the
kind of safe, healthy, sustainably-produced food that they want to eat.
Regardless of the outcome of the decision of the U.S. case at the WTO,
the
global battle over GE food will only end when the Administration learns
the
basic economic lesson, “the customer is always right.”
BACKGROUND INFORMATION AND NEWS ANALYSIS:
WTO GENE FOOD DISPUTE AND PENDING DECISION
(http://www.agmatters.net/GE/WTO_GE_Background_Jan06.doc)
In January 2006, the World Trade Organization (WTO) is expected to rule
on a
Bush Administration challenge to European rejection of genetically
engineered (GE) food. Last month, rumors circulated that the U.S. and
its
allies Canada and Argentina will prevail at the WTO . However, the U.S.
case
does not challenge Europe’s labeling or traceability regulations,
but
focuses on the E.U.’s suspension from 1998 through 2004 of approvals
of new
GE varieties. The WTO case will have no impact on the European and global
consumer rejection that is the ultimate basis for U.S. lost markets. As
the
U.S. Congressional Research Service stated, a WTO ruling in favor of the
U.S. would open Europe “to few if any significant GE imports.”
If it has any effect, a WTO “victory” for the U.S. will only
further
entrench Europe and the rest of the world in their insistence for
regulations to protect consumers and the environment from the risks of
genetically engineered foods. In the U.S., GE foods are not labeled and
safety testing is voluntary. The Bush Administration hoped its WTO case
against Europe would dissuade other countries from regulating GE foods,
but
much of the world has already imposed tougher safety and labeling rules
on
GE food, and have developed international standards to withstand WTO
challenges.