Tech | September 09, 2011 | 10 comments

EU court rules on GMO contamination opens door to biotech liability

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JanforGore
On Sept. 6, the European Union’s top court paved the way for farmers and beekeepers to recoup losses when their crops or honey become genetically contaminated from neighboring GM fields.

The European Court of Justice ruled that all food products containing GMOs – whether intentional or not – must undergo an approval process.

This marks a much stricter view than that being pushed by European Union Commissioner for health and consumer affairs, John Dalli, who wants no regulation of foods genetically contaminated “by accident,” a ludicrous idea given that coexistence ensures genetic contamination.

At the center of the dispute is Bavarian beekeeper Karl Heinz Bablok who joined with several others in suing the state when its research plots of Monsanto’s GM corn, MON 810, contaminated his honey.

In 2008, an administrative court banned Bablok from selling or giving away that honey. But in a bizarre turn, the Augsburg court also ruled that beekeepers have no claim to protection against the growing of GM crops. They immediately filed a new lawsuit. [1]

Discussing today’s ruling, attorneys for the beekeepers noted that they may now have “a claim for damages against a farmer if MON 810 pollen from his cultivation gets into their honey.” [2]

Attorneys Dr Achim Willand and Dr Georg Buchholz explained:

“If the beekeeper can no longer sell his honey, this is considered a major impairment causing a claim for damage. If the beekeeper moves his bees in order to prevent this impairment, it is also possible that the cultivator is liable for the additional work and expense of the beekeeper.”

They added that the “decision is important not only for beekeeping, but in general for the production of food and feed, as well as for trade.”

The new ruling will also apply to “imports containing traces of material from genetically modified crops that don’t have sufficient approval within the EU,” they said.

The European Court of Justice only “interprets EU law and does not settle the dispute itself,” notes Inf’OGM, a French group that maintains a neutral position on GMOs. Member states like Germany, France and Spain can apply the ruling however they deem fit in particular cases of genetic contamination. [3]

In describing the questions before the court, Inf’OGM explained that Monsanto failed to seek approval for genetically modified pollen. Instead, MON 810 approval only covers flour, gluten, semolina, starch, glucose and corn oil.

MON 810 approval is currently under reconsideration. It has been linked to organ damage in test animals [4] and its approval may be withdrawn. Until last year, it was the only GM crop approved for cultivation in the EU, although a total of 40 GMO food and feed products have been approved for sale. [5]

One of Commissioner Dalli’s first acts after taking office in 2010 was to lift the 13-year ban on BASF’s GM potato, Amflora. Sweden, Germany and the Czech Republic took the bait and immediately suffered from 47 contamination events. [6]

Today’s ruling also overturns the court’s Advocate General recommendation this February which found that genetic material inadvertently transferred from GM corn to other living organisms “is no longer viable and is thus infertile, is not a living organism and, therefore, cannot be regarded as a GMO.” [7]

In that same recommendation, however, the AG maintained that any products containing GMOs should be regulated.

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10 comments // EU court rules on GMO contamination opens door to biotech liability

  • artemis6
  • LiberalSaviour
    • +2
      LiberalSaviour  
    • Image
    • Reversing roles, farmers sue Monsanto over GMO seeds:
      ------------------------------------------------------------------------

      Genetically modified seed giant Monsanto is notorious for suing farmers [PDF] in defense of its patent claims. But now, a group of dozens of organic farmers and food activists have, with the help of the not-for-profit law center The Public Patent Foundation, sued Monsanto in a case that could forever alter the way genetically modified crops are grown in this country. But before you can understand why, it's worth reviewing an important, but underreported aspect of the fight over GMOs.

      One of the many downsides to genetically engineered food is the fact that modified genes are patented by the companies that isolate them. This is not typically part of the story that gets much attention when you read about all those great (but nonexistent) magic seeds that will grow faster, better, cheaper, etc. and seem to forever remain "just around the corner."

      read more
      http://www.grist.org/sustainable-food/2011-03-31-reversing-roles-organic-farmers...

    • 9 months ago
  • artemis6
  • JanforGore
  • Wyley_Wombat
  • JanforGore
  • Wyley_Wombat
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Wyley_Wombat:

      Great line and so true. And even though they have not covered the amount of land they thought would be covered by now, as we are seeing the transgenic contamination is doing their work for them.... and they knew it would no matter how much they lie and say there is no such thing.

    • 9 months ago
  • iowawashington
    • +2
      iowawashington  
    • It certainly sounds like a step in the right direction. The makers (and users) of any GMO should be held responsible for any "leakage" of their product into the fields, farms, livestock, or produce of their neighbors. Maybe this will be the beginning of the end of those ridiculous lawsuits against seed-saving farmers who have been unwillingly contaminated by their neighbor's GMO crop.

    • 9 months ago
  • JanforGore
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