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U.S.-European Agricultural Trade:
Food Safety and Biotechnology Issues
Charles E. Hanrahan
Senior Specialist in Agricultural Policy
Environment and Natural Resources Policy
October 21, 1998
98-861 ENR
Summary
The European Union (EU) is the second largest market for U.S.
agricultural exports. The EU's ban on meat produced using growth-promoting hormones is a
food safety issue that has been particularly contentious in U.S.-EU agricultural trade
relations. EU policy on bio-engineered products has also been an issue. A World Trade
Organization dispute settlement panel has ruled that the ban contravenes the EU's
international obligations under the WTO, but left open the option to the EU to conduct a
risk assessment of hormone-treated meat. Rules governing trade in bio-engineered products
may become an issue in WTO agricultural trade negotiations scheduled to begin in 1999.
This report will be updated as events warrant. |
The European Union, whose food and agricultural imports from the United
States were $8.8 billion in 1997, is the United States' second largest market for U.S.
farm products. Soybeans, which benefit from a zero-tariff binding that dates from the
Kennedy Round of multilateral trade negotiations in the 1960s and from an EU-wide ban on
the use of meat-and-bone meal in livestock feeding, are the leading export. The United
States maintains an agricultural trade surplus with the EU; 1997 U.S. agricultural exports
to the EU exceeded imports from the EU by almost $2 billion Although the EU is a key
market for U.S. farm products, its relative importance has declined. In 1982, the share of
total U.S. farm exports going to the EU was just over 30%; for the past 3 years, it has
held steady at 15%. The EU's decline reflects rapid growth of farm exports to other
markets, notably Canada, Mexico, and East Asia. The EU is the leading U.S. export market
for soybeans, corn by-products (corn gluten feed), almonds, dried fruit, wine and tobacco.
U.S.- EU agricultural trade has been affected by differences in measures
adopted to protect human, animal and plant health. Such food safety measures are
ostensibly adopted to protect the health or safety of domestic consumers or of domestic
livestock, fish, and crops, but they can also be used as trade barriers. The Uruguay
Round/world Trade Organization Agreement (WTO) on Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS)
Measures establishes rules for the application of such measures in agricultural trade. The
SPS Agreement requires that measures be applied only to the extent necessary to protect
health and that they be based on scientific principles and on assessment of risk. The
Agreement encourages countries to base their SPS measures on international standards and
to recognize each others' standards (equivalency) as long as they achieve the same degree
of protection. Disputes between WTO members over the requirements of the SPS agreement
fall under WTO dispute settlement procedures, which were strengthened as part of the
Uruguay Round to make procedures more expeditious and decisions more binding.
The EU's ban on meat produced using growth-promoting hormones is an SPS
issue that has been particularly contentious in U.S.-EU agricultural trade relations. EU
policy on bio-engineered products (products made from genetically modified organisms or
GMOs) has also been an issue in U.S.- EU agricultural trade. If restrictions on
bioengineered products are justified on the basis of food safety concerns, then the
provisions of the WTO's SPS Agreement would apply. There is, however, no specific WTO
agreement on rules and disciplines for bioengineered products in international trade. The
issue of establishing new rules and disciplines for such products appears likely to be on
the agenda of forthcoming multilateral agricultural trade negotiations expected to begin
in 1999.
Meat Hormones
Background
Since 1989, the EU has banned imports of meats produced with
growth-promoting hormones. The import ban is the international counterpart of internal EU
regulations that ban use of hormones in meat production. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) estimates that the ban costs the United States around $200 million
annually in lost exports, mainly of beef The EU justifies the ban as needed to ensure food
safety and consumer health. Although entirely unrelated to hormone use, concern about
"mad cow disease" or BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), a disease of cattle
shown to be transmissible to humans, has created a climate in Europe that is unfavorable
to resolving the meat hormone issue. The United States challenged the ban in World Trade
Organization dispute settlement, arguing that it violated the Uruguay Round Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Agreement. The WTO panel deliberating the U.S. challenge ruled in August of
1997 that the ban violated provisions of the SPS agreement in that it was not based on
scientific evidence nor was it based on an assessment of the risk to health posed by meat
treated with hormones. The EU appealed the ruling and on January 16, 1998, the Appellate
Body of the WTO found that the EU ban contravened the EU's obligations under the SPS
agreement, but the panel decision left open the option to the EU to conduct a risk
assessment of hormone-treated meat. A WTO arbitration panel has ruled that the EU has 15
months from the date of the appellate decision to implement the panel decision.
U.S. Perspectives
The United States wants the ban lifted immediately while the EU conducts
its new risk assessment and has proposed a time limit often months for completing it. U.S.
meat producers and exporters are concerned about the continuing loss of the EU as an
export market for meat, especially beef Scientific studies of the hormones approved for
use in the United States have found that they pose no risk to human health. Studies
carried out under the auspices of the EU Commission reach the same conclusion. U.S. meat
producers and exporters see the hormone ban as a disguised barrier to market access rather
than a measure to protect human health. They see it as an effort by EU policymakers to
protect a livestock sector that produces unmarketable surpluses from competition from more
efficient U.S. producers. U.S. trade negotiators are concerned that other countries' night
adopt policies and legislation with respect to meat imports that are similar to those of
the EU.
EU Perspectives
The EU plans to keep the ban in place while it conducts its risk
assessment. EU member governments are under considerable political pressure from consumer
and environmental groups to maintain the ban. Many livestock producers in EU member
countries support the ban as well. Following completion of its newest risk assessment, the
EU will have to decide whether to implement the WTO panel decision by withdrawing or
modifying the ban or to negotiate compensation to the U.S. for its lost export sales.
Vocal opposition in the EU to ending the ban may increase the likelihood of the latter
response.
Bio-engineered Products
Background
Crops produced from genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are rapidly
being introduced into U.S. agriculture. More than 20 bio-engineered crops are now sold
commercially and others are being developed. Among those introduced are herbicide-,
insect-, and disease-resistant hybrids and varieties, mainly of soybeans and corn. Europe
has been slower to accept and introduce genetically modified crops, although the European
Union has approved genetically modified varieties of soybeans and corn--Monsanto's Roundup
Ready soybeans and Novartis's BT corn. (Monsanto's soybean variety is resistant to the
herbicide Roundup. BT corn contains a gene that gives the plant resistance to the corn
borer.) Although the EU Council of Ministers has approved three new bioengineered corn
varieties that were cultivated in the United States in 1997, France has blocked the use,
including importation, of these corn varieties.
EU Perspectives
The biotechnology issue is affected by the widespread concern among
consumers in the EU about the quality and safety of the foods they consume. Some observers
believe that official handling of the BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) or "mad
cow disease" crisis has undermined the public's confidence in scientific assurances
and exacerbated consumer concerns about food safety. The environmental group, Greenpeace,
has been particulary vocal in protesting the use of products made from GMOs. It argues
that the long-term effects of GMOs on health and the environment are unknown and that
products made from GMOs should bear cautionary labels to inform consumers about their
contents. Views espoused by Greenpeace are widely shared by organized consumer groups
throughout the EU.
U.S. Perspectives
U.S. officials and scientists counter that the effects of GMOs are
neither unknown nor deleterious because of the rigorous approval process these products
must undergo before being released. Furthermore, they hold, products made from GMO crops
approved in the United States are as healthy and safe for consumers as like products
containing no GMOs. Three main issues have dominated U.S.- EU discussions of GMOs
--segregating GMO crops, the approval process for GMOs, and labeling food products as to
their GMO content.
Segregation. The EU's Commissioner for Agriculture, Franz
Fischler, argued initially that products processed using GMOs not only be so identified,
but also that genetically altered crops should be segregated from other, non-GMO crops in
order to maintain their identity from field to the consumer. The United States opposed
this idea vigorously, threatening to take the EU into WTO dispute settlement if it were to
require segregation of GMO crops. It would be impractical, according to the U.S. view, for
U.S. farmers to distinguish bio-engineered crops from others at harvest time and the costs
of doing so would be high. European food manufacturers also generally opposed the idea of
segregating GMO from non-GMO crops because, they argued, it would raise their processing
costs. Last summer, the Commission decided not to require segregation and that aspect of
the GMO issue appears to have been laid to rest for the time being.
Approval. U.S. concerns about the approval process for
introducing GMO crops into EU agriculture are that it is both slow and unclear. The
Commission of the EU has been working on an approval and regulatory framework for GMOs for
at least 2 years. The Commission's role is not only to decide on the introduction of GMOs
into EU agriculture, but also to regulate their use both in cultivation and in food
processing as well. Roundup Ready soybeans and BT corn were approved in 1996. Even after
the approvals there were delays in actually introducing the crops into EU agriculture. For
example, France, which had earlier requested the approval for BT corn, prohibited its sale
until November 1997. Austria and Luxembourg continue to prohibit the use of GMO crops.
Most recently the approval by the EU Council of Ministers of three new varieties of GMO
corn after months of delay has been blocked by France, threatening the loss, according to
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), of an estimated $220 million of corn exports to
Spain and Portugal this year. while accepting the EU's position that scientific review of
GMOs is a necessary part of the approval process, U.S. officials express the view that the
roles of the various scientific committees established to advise the Commission on GMOs
and other food safety or biotechnology matters are unclear. Rather than speed up the
approval process and make it more comprehensible, U.S. officials say, the committees have
contributed to delay and appear to operate in an ad hoc manner.
Labeling. The EU argues that labeling of GMOs is needed to
respond to consumer desires for information about the food products they consume. The
United States, on the other hand, has opposed mandatory labeling on grounds similar to its
opposition to segregation: based on available scientific evidence, food products made from
GMOs approved for cultivation pose no threat to human, animal or plant health, and
therefore should not need special labels.
The EU has approved a plan that requires labeling of food products
determined through testing to contain genetically modified organisms. Food processors in
the EU will be required to perform mandatory DNA or other laboratory tests to determine
the GMO content of products. The Council of Ministers dropped a proposed mandatory label
saying that a product "may contain" GMOs. The labeling requirements apply only
to products processed from genetically modified corn or soybeans. The approved plan calls
also for drawing up a list of products that are made from GMO corn or soybeans whose DNA
is lost during processing. The Council approved the labeling plan despite arguments by
U.S. food manufacturers as well as small European food processors that the testing
requirements will be too costly. The new regulations do not include any proposals to
segregate GMO from non-GMO crops.
The labeling plan is likely to affect most food products sold in Europe.
The European Commission estimates that up to 60% of food products manufactured in Europe
contain soybeans. About 15% of the U.S. soybean crop goes to the EU. U.S. officials have
noted possible technical difficulties in implementing a labeling scheme based on DNA
testing: the absence of standardized tests for detecting DNA or protein derived from
genetic modification; the cost and time involved in DNA testing; and the difficulty of
adapting tests as more crops are developed through genetic modification.
GMOs in Future Trade Negotiations. Once the next round of
multilateral trade negotiations on agriculture (expected to begin in 1999) gets underway,
rules for trade in biotechnology products are likely to be on the agenda. Work on such
rules is already under way in several international venues. The Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) has been working on a project for the harmonization of
technical rules for trade in biotechnology products. In the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC) forum, the United States is conducting risk assessment workshops for
developing Asian countries, and promoting a science-based approach to biotechnology trade
in the APEC region. The Codex Mimentarius, the international organization that develops
and recommends standards for food products, is preparing draft standards for labeling
biotechnology products. U.S. trade policy officials indicate that in the next WTO round,
they will also be seeking greater clarity and transparency in the rules that govern
biotechnology trade.
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