"Extraordinary Conference of the Parties:
Biosafety Protocol Negotiations"
NGO Position Statement
January 25, 2000
We, members of civil society from around the world, have high expectations
for this meeting. We seek the adoption of a strong precautionary Biosafety
Protocol to the Convention on Biological Diversity, as do millions of other
world citizens. We are increasingly concerned about genetically modified
organisms put in our food and being grown in our countries without anyone
fully understanding the effects of these organisms on our ecosystems and
food chains.
For these reasons, we expect governments to reach a final agreement on a
Biosafety Protocol and ensure that the Protocol reaffirms and reinforces
the goals of the Convention on Biological Diversity by establishing rules
to protect biodiversity. It would be irresponsible of our governments, our
formal representatives, to ignore the obligations to protect our biological
heritage and global food security undertaken when they ratified the
Convention.
A minority of countries, only interested in protecting their industries'
commercial investments in GMOs, stalled the Biosafety Protocol in Cartagena
last year. These countries must not be allowed to obstruct our work again
this week. Unfortunately, we do not see any change in their intentions.
- After years of dismissing the potential hazards of genetically
modified organisms, these countries still attempt to render the Protocol
meaningless by reducing its scope. We appeal to all governments to
recognize that adverse impacts on biodiversity and human health may arise
from any activities involving GMOs including transboundary movements,
handling, or use, especially centers of origin and biological diversity.
Scientifically, all GMOs pose the same kinds of risks to biodiversity and
human health, whether they are from transgenic crops, vaccines, artificial
vectors, or other amplified nucleic acid sequences. Thus, there should be
no exclusions
to the Protocol's scope all activities involving GMOs should be included
in a single process for assessment and advanced informed agreement.
- We are extremely concerned that several negotiating groups are
promoting an unworkable distinction between GMOs transferred for planting
and GMOs transferred for direct use as food, feed, or processing. A maize
kernel will not respect its legal status, nor will it respect political
boundaries: once sown, it will grow intentionally or unintentionally, with
or without approval. The intention behind a transfer is irrelevant; a
Protocol must create a precautionary process to assure that the
consequences of a transfer are acceptable. It is reasonable to expect
that, at minimum, the Biosafety Protocol will set out three essential
obligations for countries wishing to export GMOs: notably, to provide
advance notification, to disclose full information, and to require explicit
consent from the receiving country before any transboundary movement
occurs. Without such a precautionary process, developing countries are
likely to become the dumping ground for GMOs and products which cannot be
sold anywhere else.
- We are disappointed that certain delegations continue to undermine
the need for the Precautionary Principle, a principle which rightly seeks
to prevent harm to the environment or human health from GMOs. The
Precautionary Principle is consistent with sound science since it promotes
rational and prudent decision-making in the absence of conclusive
scientific knowledge. The lack of scientific consensus over genetic
engineering's potential environmental and health impacts necessitates
placing the burden of proof on those who want to introduce these organisms.
Past experience with the overly hasty release of toxic chemicals and ozone
depleting gases demonstrates the enormous effort and expense involved in
cleaning up after ill-considered actions. Living organisms represent even
greater risks; once
released, GMOs cannot be recalled if they damage the environment -- they
multiply, migrate, and mutate.
- For ensuring biosafety, traceability is critical for governments
serious about pursuing the conservation and sustainable use of biological
diversity. There are no credible reasons to refuse to label and segregate
these products. Labelling and segregation of GMOs in food and agriculture
has already become the market reality in many industrialized countries. We
must enable national authorities, farmers, and food buyers to identify GMOs
at any stage of distribution.
- Despite being a non-party to the Convention, the United States
government acts to subordinate this Protocol to international trade rules,
such as those of the World Trade Organization. We offer our support to the
vast majority of countries which, by ratifying the Convention, are
committed to upholding environmental values. Even a member of the U.S.
Congress recently observed that "when the health and safety of consumers
and the environment is the price, free trade is just too expensive." These
negotiations are not primarily about trade; they concern biodiversity and
the life support systems for the world's people. Protection of biological
diversity is an imperative, not a luxury or an afterthought.
- There is increasing evidence that introducing GMOs has significant
socio-economic impacts. Without a strong liability regime, those suffering
serious impacts particularly indigenous and farming communities -- would
be subsidizing the biotech industry. The Protocol must include mechanisms
for all affected peoples to obtain fair compensation.
We welcome the delegates' determination to leave Montreal with a Protocol
signed by the end of this week. We share their commitment to place the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity at the heart of this
Protocol. Failure to establish a strong precautionary Protocol would
betray the needs and expectations of citizens world-wide. We urge our
representatives to adopt a strong precautionary Protocol mindful of the
wisdom attributed to Chief Seattle:
"We do not inherit the Earth from our parents; we borrow it from our
children."
German NGO Forum on Environment and Development
World Development Movement (U.K.)
Grupo de Reflexion Rural (Argentina)
Red Alerta Sobre Transgenicos (Argentina)
Earthlife Africa Johannesburg (S.Africa)
RAFI -- Rural Advancement Foundation International(Uruguay,Canada)Council
for Responsible Genetics (USA)
Tinker Institute on International Law and Organizations
Washington Biotechnology Action Council (USA)
Institute for Applied Ecology (Germany)
Institute of Science in Society (U.K.)
Friends of the Earth International
Third World Network
Biotech Action Montreal
Women's Environmental Network (U.K.)
Genetics Forum (U.K.)
Biolatina.org
Greenpeace International
Greenpeace Argentina
Australian GeneEthics Network
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (USA)
Council of Canadians
The Edmonds Institute (USA)
Sobrevivencia (Paraguay)
Biowatch (S. Africa)
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