The challenge for countries, especially developing countries and countries with economies in transition, is the formulation of national policies and regulatory frameworks to ensure biosafety. The holistic approach to biosafety encompasses scientific, ecological, health, social, economic, cultural and ethical dimensions in the context of the precautionary principle. It also requires a long term perspective in assessing technology and its products.
A comprehensive biosafety policy will need to be accompanied by and integrated with policies in other related fields such as agriculture, science and technology, industrial development, health, biodiversity and environmental protection. An important element would be options for non-gene technology approaches to achieving a stated objective such as increased agricultural productivity, pest and disease management or environmental remediation. For developing countries with limited resources and/or alternative knowledge and practices in farming and health systems, this approach can be both cost-effective and ensures the further strengthening of national capacities and sovereignty over food, nutrition and health. A regulatory framework includes a national law, subsidiary regulations, administrative measures and implementation/enforcement mechanisms. Underlying this is the generation and flow of information and knowledge on biosafety that can be part of the public domain to ensure public participation and ever-deepening understanding and implementation of biosafety.
This section provides some information on the experiences of countries and regions.

Model National Biosafety Law

A law to provide for the regulation of the import, deliberate release into the environment, placing on the market, and the contained use of GMOs and products thereof. […]

Model National Biosafety Law

A law to provide for the regulation of the import, deliberate release into the environment, placing on the market, and the contained use of GMOs and products thereof. […]

Model National Biosafety Law

A law to provide for the regulation of the import, deliberate release into the environment, placing on the market, and the contained use of GMOs and products thereof. […]

GM battle in danger of trampling Africa

Tewolde Egziabher argues that developing nations must put in place biosafety systems based on the precautionary principle, and develop the capacity – no matter how costly – to deal with the risks of genetically modified crops. […]

Risk Assessment of GMO Products in the EU (Summary in Chinese)

This is a first detailed review of a number of applications submitted and approved at the European level, and which are still contested by a number of Member States in the EU. […]

Risk Assessment of GMO Products in the EU

This is a first detailed review of a number of applications submitted and approved at the European level, and which are still contested by a number of Member States in the EU. […]

Model Law for Safety in Biotechnology for Africa

First drafted by the OAU and the Ethiopian Environmental Protection Authority, the African Model Law for Biosafety was designed in order that countries in Africa could adopt it in their law as they move towards the implementation of the Biosafety Protoco […]

Europe Still Resisting GMOs (Spanish)

Though Europe’s de facto moratorium on GM approvals has ended, there is by no means consensus on GMOs in Europe. […]

Europe Still Resisting GMOs

Though Europe’s de facto moratorium on GM approvals has ended, there is by no means consensus on GMOs in Europe. […]

GMO Control Bill 2004 — Tasmania

A bill to provide for Tasmania to be declared to be a genetically modified organisms free area. […]