Tuesday January 18, 8:36 pm Eastern Time
INTERVIEW: Flexibility needed in GMO talks, US says
By Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Countries will have to show flexibility at
upcoming talks if they are going to strike a deal to protect the world's
plants and animals from the potentially adverse effects of genetically
modified organisms, a U.S. official said on Tuesday.

``The prospects for an agreement are good if countries are willing to
address each other's concerns and be flexible,'' David Sandalow, assistant
secretary of state for oceans, environment and science, told Reuters.

Environmental officials from some 134 countries will gather in Montreal this
week for talks on a proposed Biosafety Protocol -- which could establish
rules for the international movement of genetically modified organisms,
including crops. The talks formally open Monday and end Jan. 28.

A similar effort last year in Cartagena, Colombia failed.

Sandalow, a former White House environmental adviser who will head the U.S.
delegation, said the United States was willing to consider alternative
wording for a ``savings clause'' to clarify that the Biosafety Protocol
would not rewrite food safety rules of the World Trade Organization.

The United States also supports establishing a ``Biosafety Clearing House''
to post information about the latest government approvals of genetically
modified crops, he said.


U.S. OPPOSES USING PACT TO ADDRESS CROPS

While the United States supports a Biosafety Protocol, it opposes efforts by
the European Union to use the pact to address food safety concerns about
genetically modified crops.

``This is not the right forum for a debate about food safety,'' Sandalow
said, noting that the environmental aides crafting the protocol are not food
safety experts.

As part of a group of negotiating countries known as the Miami Group, the
United States wants the Biosafety Protocol to focus primarily on preventing
harmful effects to the environment.

Other Miami Group members are Canada, Chile, Australia, Argentina and
Uruguay.

In the group's view, genetically modified corn, soybeans and other crops
intended for food, feed and processing pose little environmental risk.

But other ``living modified organisms'' such as planting seeds, trees and
fish for release do warrant tighter controls, the negotiating group says.

The United States particularly is concerned with a provision in the proposed
protocol that would require advance notice of shipments of genetically
modified crops.

Even if that requirement were restricted to just the first shipment to an
importing country, it could disrupt world food trade, Sandalow said.

``The core issue is tracing a particular GM crop from the field all the way
to the dock where it is being offloaded,'' he said. ``For some products,
such as seeds, it can be accomplished feasibly. But for bulk commodities, it
cannot.''


U.S. FLEXIBLE ON WORDING

One key issue has been the Miami's Group insistence on a savings clause to
make clear the Biosafety Protocol does not override other international
agreements.

WTO rules prevent countries from blocking food imports unless there is a
compelling scientific reason. Miami Group countries fear that without a
savings clause, the Biosafety Protocol could be used to circumvent WTO
rules.

``We're not wed to the particular wording that we've proposed,'' Sandalow
said. ``But there needs to be some provision in the text that reflects the
intention of the countries not to renegotiate WTO.''

The Miami Group is not insisting on language that would subordinate the
protocol to the WTO.

``There has been some confusion on that topic and I want to make that
clear,'' Sandalow said. ``This is a relationship of equals'' between the two
pacts.




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