US at WTO: India allows GM cotton, mustard at home but blocks imports

Published 2023년 7월 20일

Tridge summary

The US has expressed concerns about India's approval of genetically modified (GM) mustard and the cultivation of GM cotton, while demanding a non-GMO and GM-free certificate for 24 food products. The US has asked India to revoke this requirement, arguing that it is inconsistent with global trade norms. India has not yet provided a scientific justification for the GM-free certificate requirement, according to the US.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The US has raised concerns at India's approval for environmental release of genetically modified (GM) mustard and the routine cultivation of GM cotton by Indian farmers even as New Delhi mandates a non-GMO and GM-free status certificate from exporting countries for 24 food products. , including apples, wheat, rice, tomato and potato. In a submission to the WTO on Tuesday, it asked India to revoke the measure. The United States continues to request India immediately revoke this trade restrictive measure, it said. Last year, India approved the country's first ever environmental release of a GM food crop, DMH11 mustard. The approval was issued for a limited period of four years. New Delhi has said told the WTO that the certification requirement is an assurance that the food crops exported to India for human consumption are of non-GM origin and GM-free while the US argued that compliance with the GM-free certificate requirement ...

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