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China GMO corn hits policy deadlockqrcode

Mar. 9, 2011

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Mar. 9, 2011
China's first strain of genetically modified corn is facing policy deadlock and may take years before it can be planted, a Chinese researcher said on Monday.

China gave the phytase corn safety approval in late 2009, and at the time scientists said they expected large-scale production could happen as early as 2012.

The GMO approval means the corn is safe to use as animal feed. But the strain also needs clearance as a new seed type under Chinese rules that apply to GMO and non-GMO alike.

Although this was no problem for GMO cotton, which does not enter the human food chain, the GMO corn has hit a problem because there is no regulation covering corn seed intended exclusively for animal feed production.

"For the GMO corn, it is partly used for food. There is a disconnect with the regulations," Chen Rumei, a researcher with the Biotechnology Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, told Reuters. Chen is a member of the research team that developed phytase corn.

A seed must undergo regional trials before it can go through China's seed registration procedure, which may take 3 to 5 years, before commercial production.

"There is no detailed regulation regarding how the strain can be selected for regional trials," Chen said.

Chen said phytase corn was designed to solve an environmental problem rather than for higher yields.

But seed approval depends on a seed's ability to improve yields by at least 3 percent, or in some areas up to 8 percent. The phytase corn was based on a high yield seed, but makes no claim to improving yield. It helps pigs digest more phosphorous, enhancing growth and reducing pollution from animal waste by 30 percent, said Chen. China is the world's largest pig breeder.

"We have to coordinate with government authorities... and if the policies can go through properly, we hope it could be planted commercially in the coming five years," said Chen.

An official at Origin Agritech Ltd., which has exclusive rights to sell the GMO seed in China, declined to comment and said the president of the company was not available to comment.

"For China in particular, with a relatively lower amount of acreage to feed a growing population, the (GMO) technology is even more important," Clive James, chairman of the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications, said at a news conference on Monday.

James expected phytase corn would help double China's GMO acreage to 7 million hectares by 2015 but the growth depended on the government pushing forward with implementation.

Global planting of biotech crops jumped 10 percent last year.
Source: Reuters

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