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Bulgaria approves law to ban GMO crops

Published 19 March 2010 - Updated 22 March 2010
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GMO
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Bulgaria's parliament voted on Thursday (18 March) to tighten a law that effectively banned cultivation of genetically-modified (GM) crops for scientific and commercial reasons in response to public fears.

The ruling centre-right GERB party decided to drop a planned moratorium on GMO production because the new law would keep the European Union member GMO-free, deputies said.

"There will be no field on the country's territory where GMOs can be cultivated," said Kostadin Yazov of GERB's parliamentary group.

Non-government organisations, farmers and citizens have rallied for over two months against the government's initial plans to replace a ban with a licensing regime, which they feared would flood the Balkan country with GMO crops.

The new law bans GMO cultivation in nature protected areas and large buffer zones around those areas and fields with organic crops, which effectively means scientific experiments and commercial cultivation will be impossible in the Balkan country.

The amendments also forbid growing crops approved by the European Commission such as the genetically modified potato, Amflora, developed by German chemical maker BASF, and three genetically modified maize types, made by US biotech firm Monsanto.

Under the law, fines for perpetrators were raised to up to one million levs (511,325 euros). Protesters said they were happy with the new law.

Giving in to growing public resistance, the ruling party was forced to drop its initial plans to ease the GMO crop cultivations and introduce a licensing regime which it had said was in line with the EU legislation.

Authorising GMOs for consumption, processing or cultivation in Europe is a politically-charged subject, with many openly hostile to what they call 'Frankenstein foods'.

Six member states currently apply so-called 'safeguard clauses' on GMOs in the EU: Austria, France, Greece, Hungary, Germany and Luxembourg.

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Background: 

Germany joined France, Greece, Hungary and other EU countries opposed to GM crop cultivation in April last year by ordering a ban on Monsanto's MON 810 maize, despite European rulings that the biotech grain is safe (EurActiv 15/04/09).

Shortly before, EU environment ministers had backed the right for individual countries to refuse GM crop cultivation in a decision related to Monsanto's MON 810 maize (EurActiv 03/03/09).

In December 2008, EU environment ministers backed the possibility for member states to introduce GMO-free zones on their territories (EurActiv 09/12/08).

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