For example, WTO dispute panels refer to standards that are set by the
international food regulatory authority, the Codex Alimentarius Commission
(Codex). Standards for assessing the human safety of genetically engineered
plants and microorganisms were adopted by Codex in July 2003. The EU will
surely insist that its human safety regulations are protected against
any <
WTO challenge . In addition to all of Europe, labeling of GE foods is
required in all of the E.U. as well as China, the Russian Federation,
South
Korea, Japan, Brazil, Australia and several other countries. In December,
a
report by India’s Central Committee for Food Standards called for
mandatory
labeling of GE food. When India’s labeling rule is finalized, over
half of
the world’s population will live in countries that require GE food
labeling.
In addition, 130 countries have ratified the Biosafety Protocol, the
international agreement on protecting the environment from risks associated
with trade in viable GE food and crops. The Protocol entered into force
in
September 2003, enabling countries to object to GE imports based on <
precaution and/or national biosafety laws. Countries throughout Africa,
Asia
and South America are concerned about threats to their natural biodiversity
from GE crops and have developed or are working on regulations to restrict
GE imports. Regardless of the outcome of its current WTO case against
Europe, the U.S. will face increasing global resistance to its GE food
exports for the foreseeable future.
Background and History of the WTO Case
In October 1998, the Environment Committee of the European Parliament
called
on the European Commission to institute a moratorium on new approvals
of
imports, planting and sale of GE foods, citing increasing scientific
concerns regarding the health and environmental risks of this new food
technology. The Commission never instituted a moratorium, but in June
1999
five European nations declared that they would block any new E.U. approvals,
and an additional six countries stated that they would also not authorize
new GE crops. All eleven nations stated that they would lift their
opposition once European regulations on safety and labeling were finalized.
On May 13, 2003 the U.S., along with Canada and Argentina, announced it
would take a complaint against Europe to the WTO for this “de facto
moratorium” on new GE food approvals. The U.S.-led complaint alleged
that
Europe refused to approve and delayed processing applications for new
GE
foods, and that the E.U. failed to stop individual
EU member states from banning GE products.
In April 2004, new E.U. rules for approval and labeling of GE foods went
into effect and by the end of the summer three new GE approvals had been
granted. Despite the lifting of any de facto moratorium, the Bush
Administration refused to retract its WTO complaint, stating that "[T]he
approval of a single product does not affect our WTO challenge …
it does not
indicate there is a consistently functioning approval process." The
Administration continued to claim that Europe’s delay in new approvals
was
costing American farmers $300 million per year.