GENEVA (AP) —— The WTO has ruled that the EU broke international trade rules by stopping imports of
genetically1 modified foods, officials said Tuesday.
The preliminary judgment2 by a World Trade Organization panel concluded that the European Union had an effective ban on biotech foods for six years from 1998, said the officials, who spoke3 on condition of anonymity4 because it is a confidential5 report.
The report sided with a legal complaint brought by the United States, Canada and Argentina over an EU moratorium6 on approval of new biotech foods, the officials said. The panel ruled that individual bans in six EU member states - Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Italy and Luxembourg - violated international trade rules.
The EU and United States declined to comment as diplomats7 were still studying the details late Tuesday. The ruling - said to be one of the most complex the commerce body has issued - runs to about 1,000 pages. It had been delayed several times.
The complainants claim that there is no scientific evidence for the EU's actions and that the moratorium has been an unfair barrier to producers of biotech foods who want to export to the EU.
An environmental group, Friends of the Earth, says the case undermines the right of governments to decide for themselves what is safe for their citizens, and pressures other countries - especially developing nations - to accept genetically modified foods against their will.
The EU ended its moratorium in 2004 when it allowed onto the market a modified strain of sweet corn, grown mainly in the United States. Washington has said it will continue with its WTO case until it is convinced that all applications for approval are being decided8 on scientific rather than political grounds.
Tom West, vice9 president of biotechnology affairs at seed company Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc., said the decision "reinforces the heart and soul of what WTO is all about."
The EU moratorium limited choices for both U.S. and European farmers, as well as European consumers, West said. Iowa-based Pioneer supplies seed and other grain products in nearly 70 countries