UK farmers are losing out by not having GM crops, claim two NFU members who have recently been on a study tour in Spain, where 11% of the country’s 550,000ha (1.36m acre) maize crop is genetically modified.
“Ironically as WTO negotiations continue to bring down trade barriers, we are denied access to cropping tools that could be the key to European farming survival in the face of increasingly tough competition,” said Paul Temple, vice-chairman of the combinable crops board and a Farmers Weekly barometer farmer.
Herbicide resistant GM sugar beet could significantly reduce production costs to offset some of the severe price cuts in the proposed reforms, he said.
Mr Temple said he and the other delegates who went on the trip arranged by Spanish biotech organisation ANTAMA were impressed by the country’s commonsense attitude to GM crops.
Four years of growing them had seen no legal difficulties, the industry having created workable regulations, for example on buffer zones for co-existence with conventional crops. “This mature approach has allowed the area to develop without creating a two-tier market,” said Mr Temple.
by Andrew Blake (About this Author)
Join over 70,000 readers and stay up-to-date with what’s happening in the Farming industry. Subscribe here and save 20% on Farmers Weekly.
Brussels needs to rethink GM policy, says NIAB
03 July 2009
Welsh Assembly proposes tough GM controls
30 June 2009
Crop Watch East: Crops still standing despite heavy rain, says Brian Ross
29 June 2009
Crop Watch West: Rain has improved crops, says Bryce Rham
29 June 2009
Crop Watch North: Harvest prospects are in the balance, says Patrick Stephenson
29 June 2009
Farmer Focus Arable: ACCS inspection baffles Richard Beachell
05 July 2009
Farmer Focus Arable: Surreal spraying for Seth Pascoe
05 July 2009
Talking Point: Learn from set-aside debate
05 July 2009
Farmer Focus Arable: Meat-free day is madness says Richard Cobbald
04 July 2009
Farmer Focus Arable: Fertiliser prices stay high for Allan Chambers
04 July 2009