New Forms of GMOs Highlight Biosecurity Loophole
7 March 2006
New Forms of GMOs Highlight Biosecurity Loophole
Threats posed by new forms of GMOs under development represent a fundamental challenge to New Zealand’s approach to biosecurity labelling requirements.
Food plants genetically engineered to produce pharmaceuticals and industrial substances are being field trialled in the US and carry a wholly different level of risk for New Zealand’s environment and the integrity of its food supply, according to a Sustainability Council report released today.
A relatively new treaty that regulates the international trade in living GMOs, the Cartagena Protocol, has the potential to be a leading tool in checking the unintended flow of such GMOs across the border.
However, at the last meeting of the parties to the Protocol in May, New Zealand vetoed the development of rules that would oblige anyone sending food and animal feed to specify not just the intended content of shipments but the actual content, as it relates to living GMOs. New Zealand was one of just two countries – of 119 present - to object to proposals for requiring actual content of these shipments to be labelled. It was also the only one to question whether liability rules were required at all under the Protocol.
Its position to date appears to have been driven by concerns that labelling requirements would create additional costs for New Zealand’s conventional agricultural exporters. However these exporters are increasingly required to give assurances that food products have no detectable GMO content as a result of strong consumer resistance in major markets to GMOs of any form, and at any level.
It is the potential "unintended" flow of GMOs across the border and into the environment and the food chain that is the bigger issue for New Zealand. Small amounts of these new forms of GMOs can do the same damage whether or not their import is intended. Mainstream institutions recognise that new forms of GMOs in particular pose environmental risks that differ from other organisms, and any contamination of food by GMOs carrying pharmaceuticals would have very serious commercial consequences. Yet prior clearance is currently required under the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act only if GMOs are "knowingly" imported.
The Council’s report, Brave New Biosecurity, concludes that it is very likely that on the basis of trade interests alone the nation should be a supporter of strict labelling rules for unintended GMO content, not an ardent opponent. When the parties to the Protocol meet again next week, New Zealand has the chance to realign its stance.
The report is
available at:
___________________ Executive
Summary The Cartagena Protocol is a treaty designed to
enhance biosecurity by providing for prior consent to
international shipments of living GMOs – known as Living
Modified Organisms (LMOs). It is motivated by concern to
protect biodiversity and also carries significant trade
implications. The Protocol has the potential to deliver
two important upgrades on New Zealand’s existing
biosecurity: - Requirements for labelling that
would identify those LMOs not intended to be a part of a
shipment, which could otherwise escape detection; and
- A new liability regime to provide compensation for any
harm resulting from importing an LMO, when
redress would otherwise generally not be available. Such
provisions (currently under negotiation) are brave new
biosecurity in response to a new world in which the range
of LMOs on offer will include threats such as organisms
carrying pharmaceuticals, plastics, or sterility
characteristics. At the time Government considered
ratifying the Protocol in September 2004, the balance of
officials’ advice leaned towards deferment. Ministers
however announced they had decided to ratify: -
"Because New Zealand is a good international citizen"; and
because - "We are committed to comprehensive
biosecurity"; - "We support people being
informed about what's imported and exported"; and
- "To ensure the best interests of New Zealand and other
agricultural exporters are taken into account
in the development of the Protocol". In May 2005 officials
from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry for the
Environment submitted their proposed negotiating positions
for a Protocol meeting in Montreal. The proposed positions
narrowed the focus to the pursuit of not just trade
interests, but largely ones that depend on New Zealand
becoming a significant LMO exporter, and were
approved. At those Montreal negotiations, New Zealand was
the strongest opponent of measures that would provide
for: - effective prior informed consent of LMO
contaminated shipments; and - effective sanctions
for any harm caused and non-compliance. New Zealand was
one of only two nations to reject a series of proposed
framings of the labelling provisions that are required to
properly operationalise the Protocol, and it alone
questioned whether a liability regime was required at
all. Labelling While the Protocol carries clear measures
for handling intended shipments of LMOs, unintended LMO
contaminants in food and feed are a critical point of
negotiation. New Zealand supports requiring labelling for
"intended" content, but not for the "actual content" of
such shipments. The concern underlying the position is that
this may impose testing costs on conventional (non-LMO)
exporters. However, given persistent consumer resistance to
LMO contamination, such testing is increasingly becoming
routine. A focus on such risks to exporters in official
documentation has been at the expense of examining risks on
the other side of the equation – the damage that could
result from unintended imports of LMOs. Labelling
requirements are a core biosecurity question with important
environmental and economic dimensions. Mainstream
institutions recognise that new forms of LMOs in particular
pose environmental risks that differ from other organisms.
Prior informed consent requires that labelling specify the
actual content. Labelling is a vital aid to checking a free
flow across the border of unintended LMO contaminants. In
economic terms, conventional food producers are exposed to
financial damage from LMO contaminants entering the supply
chain – domestically and through re-export. Even if it is
assumed New Zealand becomes a significant exporter of LMOs,
it is likely that the balance of trade interests alone
favours New Zealand supporting strict labelling rules for
unintended LMO contaminants. Liability There are well
documented financial risks arising from LMO contamination
of conventional food products. Uncertainty surrounds the
potential magnitude of environmental harm due to the lack
of knowledge of environmental effects. New Zealand’s
approach to liability under the Protocol has been to
relitigate the need for such rules and to seek to delimit
their scope. A concern expressed in official documents is
that if the Protocol were to set liability rules, it would
force New Zealand to change its domestic law. This law
currently provides a de facto subsidy for LMO operators via
relief from liability for the more serious risks. If
considered in an international context, the national
interest question is the overall balance of risk to New
Zealand parties – financial risks from importing LMOs,
versus the risk of claims for harm caused to others. The
balance of advantage overwhelmingly favours New Zealand
supporting strong liability arrangements if it does not
become a significant LMO exporter. As in the case of
labelling rules, even if the nation were to develop an LMO
export industry, binding liability arrangements under the
Protocol are still likely to be in New Zealand’s interest.
They would also support the principles advanced at the time
of ratification. An assumption implicit through the
official documentation is that New Zealand will become a
significant exporter of LMOs. This is just one possible
scenario for agricultural development, and ministers state
that they are agnostic as to the desirability of LMO
exports emerging, yet other scenarios are largely
unexplored. Moreover, there is no systematic analysis of
the overall balance of risk with respect to imports and
exports, and between trade and environment considerations.
The Sustainability Council’s analysis is that key positions
being taken are very likely to work against the balance of
New Zealand’s interests. The stakes are therefore not
simply that New Zealand fails to back important
environmental protection measures. Current negotiating
positions are antagonistic to biosecurity procedures New
Zealand will want to depend on in future to protect the
integrity of its food products and access to premium export
markets. Further, New Zealand’s willingness to use
blocking tactics in Protocol negotiations is impairing the
ability of the other nations to obtain such
protection. ENDS