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Impact of Biotechnology on Markets & International Trade. Andrew Rude Office of Scientific and Technical Affairs Foreign Agricultural Service US Department of Agriculture October 25, 2007 Peanut Genomics and Biotechnology Workshop Atlanta, GA andrew.rude@usda.gov.
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Impact of Biotechnology on Markets & International Trade Andrew Rude Office of Scientific and Technical Affairs Foreign Agricultural Service US Department of Agriculture October 25, 2007 Peanut Genomics and Biotechnology Workshop Atlanta, GA andrew.rude@usda.gov
Global Agricultural Biotechnology Soybeans: 57%of global area Maize: 25% of global area Cotton: 13% of global area Canola: 5% of global area • Biotech production on 4 main crops: • Two Main traits: agronomic • Herbicide Tolerance • Insect Resistance
Area of U.S. Biotech Crops * USDA/NASS June 2007
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops • Biotechnology policies often have their origin in consumer opinion and NGO pressure. • Scientific/legal arguments alone may not be effective. • Consumer perception important
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops: Regulatory Systems • Functioning Regulatory System • Allows for the development, commercialization and trade of biotech crops • Politically-motivated • Inhibit development, application and commercialization of the technology and trade in biotech crops
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops: Approvals and Commercialization • Domestic & International Approval • Asynchronous Approvals • Each step in approval process very expensive • Focus of biotech production on major commodities • “Orphan Crops” • Is peanut production large enough to attract sufficient support to go through approval process?
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops: International OrganizationsCartagena Protocol • Sub-Treaty under the Convention on Biological Diversity • Objective: Contribute to the safe transfer, handling, and use of LMOs that cross international borders and that may have adverse effects on biodiversity. Trade Concernsvs. Environmental Concerns
Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety • Very few exporting countries are Parties • Environmental ministries - no consultation with agricultural or trade officials • Trade and agricultural interests carry little weight in Protocol discussions. • Main Concerns of Industry: • Documentation Requirements • Liability and Redress • Compliance
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops: Traceability and Labeling Requirements • Many countries adopting T&L rules (but enforcement varies). • EU: requires tracing and labeling of all biotech crops and food ingredients derived from those crops. • Based on “consumer right to know” • Impacts: • Product Reformulation • Market loss • Skewed consumer perception • Increased producer costs • Increased Demands on Regulatory Systems • Codex CCFL labeling initiative still gridlocked.
Critical Factors for Marketing Biotech Crops:Public Perception “Image is everything.” Andre Agassi
Food Processor Fear of Consumer Reaction and Fear of “Frankenfood” Label • Actual or perceived consumer reaction • Shapes regulatory frameworks - politicized • EU • Fear of consumer reaction has curtailed biotechnology development and application • Bt Potato • RR Wheat • Liberty Link Rice
Status of Peanut Production and Trade • No commercialized biotech peanuts • Status of biotech regulatory systems vary widely in major peanut producing countries • China, India, United States – established regulatory systems • Burma, Nigeria, Sudan, Indonesia – no/not well developed regulatory systems
Status of Peanut Production and Trade • Major Peanut Exporting Countries (China, Argentina, United States, India, Vietnam) • Developed biotech regulatory systems (or activity working toward them) • China, Argentina, United States and India produce biotech crops
Status of Peanut Production and Trade • Acceptance of peanuts derived from biotechnology by consumers, food processors and importers difficult to predict • Hesitancy among consumers and food processors to protect image and brand name especially for “high end” products and higher income markets • Bulk users may be more accepting where price more of an issue
Factors Supporting Development and Commercialization of Biotech Peanuts • Now 22 Countries Producing Biotech Crops • No longer U.S. vs EU • Multi-lateral discussion • More countries have a vested interest in developing and commercializing biotech crops
Factors Supporting Development and Commercialization of Biotech Peanuts • Biotech crops pervasive internationally • Biotech ingredients already in some 75% of food products in U.S. grocery stores • Over 11 years experience with biotech crops • No longer a new technology • Not a single reported negative health impact • Public perception may be changing
Factors Supporting Development and Commercialization of Biotech Peanuts • Research on products that have direct consumer and quality attributes • Reduced aflatoxin • Reduced allergenicity • Increased consumer demand for the technology • To date – Push of biotech, little public Demand • Need for improved productivity to meet increased demands brought about by population growth and biofuels • Consumer attributes
Factors Supporting Development and Commercialization of Biotech Peanuts • Peanut industry may wish to study rollout efforts of other agricultural biotech products • Long-term/multi-year effort
Thank you Andrew Rude Office of Scientific and Technical Affairs New Technologies and Production Methods Division Foreign Agricultural Service US Department of Agriculture andrew.rude@usda.gov