“New GMOs” take a step forward in the European Parliament

Published 2024년 1월 24일

Tridge summary

The European Parliament's Environment Committee has approved new rules promoting the use of 'new genomic techniques' (NGT) in agriculture, which enable plant genetic material editing without external additions. These rules could exempt NGT seeds and products from stringent genetically modified organisms (GMOs) regulations, provided the modifications could occur naturally or through traditional crossings. However, the proposal has sparked debate due to potential health and environmental risks. Eastern European countries, including Poland, express concerns about their export markets and a possible surge in patents due to NGTs, which could lead to a seed oligopoly detrimental to growers.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Varieties more resistant to drought, insects or diseases, low-gluten wheat... so many horizons opened up by "new genomic techniques" (NGT), a host of tools "editing" the genetic material of plants without addition exterior - unlike “transgenic” genetically modified organisms (GMOs). Members of the European Parliament's Environment Committee voted in favor of new rules intended to encourage these emerging technologies, before a plenary vote in early February for negotiations with member states. Principle of the text proposed last summer by the European Commission: the drastic rules governing GMOs (long authorization procedure, traceability, labeling, surveillance, etc.) would not apply to seeds and products from NGT and presenting modifications likely to occur naturally or via traditional crossings (known as “category 1”). Subject to a limited number of mutations, they would be considered “equivalent” to conventional varieties and simply registered in a public database. All other ...
Source: TerreNet

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