Developed countries have accumulated experiences in regulating biotechnology, including gene technology, ranging from voluntary to legally binding measures; from sectoral to holistic approaches.

The challenge for developing countries and countries with economies in transition is to build on existing experiences, identifying their strengths and weaknesses, and taking into full account the growing body, and gaps, in scientific and socio-economic knowledge of biosafety and biotechnology.

A holistic and comprehensive regulatory approach to ensure biosafety would be based on the precautionary principle, covering the entire range of activities from research and development of GMOs to their commercialization, and post-release monitoring.

Sound science draws a clear line between ?containment? and ?release? so that an activity whereby a GMO or parts thereof comes into contact with the environment will be classified as a release. Regulations and measures for release will then apply.

Information disclosure to the public generates feedback, including scientific and technical inputs from independent scientists and researchers in the field of biosafety, which is crucial for sound regulation.

There are ongoing discussions in many countries and at the regional and international level on the scope of information that should be disclosed to the public. Technology developers and private biotechnology companies are claiming broader protection of data, beyond that of traditional trade secrets and confidential business information. The provision of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety for claims to ?confidential information?, if inappropriately implemented, can deprive the public of necessary information to ensure biosafety.

National regulations will thus need to ensure information disclosure, from both the private and public sector technology developers.

GM in Corn Demonstrating Vulnerability of Food Chain

The discovery of GM corn in New Zealand shows how vulnerable the food chain is to contamination, according to Jack Heinemann of the New Zealand Institute of Gene Ecology. […]

Argentina To Fight Monsanto In Court, Suspend Soybean Talks

Argentina has decided to suspend talks with Monsanto over the design of a payment system that would allow the company to collect royalties on the pervasive use of its popular soybean seeds. […]

Contained use versus release to the environment

For biosafety purposes, it is customary to distinguish between contained uses of GMOs and their releases to the environment. Mae-Wan Ho tells why. […]

Participación Pública en la Implementación del Protocolo de Bioseguridad

A discussion on public participation in the context of the Biosafety Protocol. […]

Public Participation in the Implementation of the Biosafety Protocol

A discussion on public participation in the context of the Biosafety Protocol. […]

Labeling Thresholds vs. Safety Thresholds of LMOs/GMOs

This is a primer on what monitoring thresholds mean and how they relate to issues of relevance in the Protocol. […]

Elements of Precaution: Recommendations for the Regulation of Food Biotechnology in Canada

Scientific uncertainty of the safety of GM products is the central concern of this report, commissioned by the Royal Society of Canada. In light of such uncertainty, the report calls for the adoption of the precautionary principle in regulatory policy. […]

Post-Market Oversight of Biotech Foods: Is the System Prepared?

This Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology commissioned report shows that the US government has no effective system of overseeing GM crops once these crops reach the market, a regulatory gap that could pose acute problems. […]

Public participation in national biotechnology policy and biosafety regulation

This paper considers the challenges entailed in applying the principles and methods of public participation to national and international policy processes. […]

A Critique of the Biosafety Clearing House

This analysis addresses concerns about the Biosafety Clearing House established under the Cartegena Protocol on Biosafety as it currently exists in “pilot” form. […]