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						India government panel 
						clears GM mustard but hurdles remain: sources 
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		 [August 25, 2016] 
		By Mayank Bhardwaj and Krishna N. Das 
			NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A government 
			panel has cleared commercial use of what would be India's first 
			genetically modified (GM) food crop, but the political establishment 
			will still have to give final approvals amid wide-spread public 
			opposition to the technology.
 Technical clearance for indigenously developed GM mustard seeds was 
			given on Aug. 11 by the panel of government and independent experts 
			following multiple reviews of crop trial data generated over almost 
			a decade, said two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
 
 The decision to go ahead is likely to be made public soon by the 
			environment ministry's Genetic Engineering Approval Committee, and 
			is expected eventually to move to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 
			desk via Environment Minister Anil Madhav Dave.
 
 Dave could not immediately be reached for comment.
 
 News of the approval comes at a time when U.S. seed maker Monsanto - 
			which dominates the GM cotton market in India - is facing heightened 
			government regulation that has forced the company to consider 
			quitting a country it has operated in for decades.
 
			
			 
			Reuters reported on Wednesday that Monsanto had withdrawn an 
			application seeking approval for its next generation GM cotton seeds 
			in India, escalating a long-running dispute between New Delhi and 
			the world's biggest seed maker.
 Permitting GM food crops is a big call for India, which spends tens 
			of billions of dollars importing edible oils and other food items 
			every year. Farmers are stuck with old technology, yields are at a 
			fraction of world levels, cultivable land is shrinking and weather 
			patterns have become less predictable, experts say.
 
 But political and public opposition to lab-altered food remains 
			strong amid fears that GM crops could compromise food safety and 
			biodiversity.
 
 Some grassroots groups associated with Modi's nationalist Bharatiya 
			Janata Party have also opposed GM crops because of the reliance on 
			seeds patented by multi-nationals like Monsanto, DuPont, Dow 
			Chemical and Syngenta, which is to be taken over by a Chinese 
			company.
 
			
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			An Indian scientist holds a genetically modified (GM) rapeseed crop 
			under trial in New Delhi, India February 13, 2015. REUTERS/Anindito 
			Mukherjee/File photo 
            
			
 
India placed a moratorium on GM eggplant in 2010, also after an experts panel 
had given its clearance, effectively bringing the regulatory system to a 
deadlock.
 Modi, however, who was instrumental in making Gujarat state India's leading user 
of GM cotton when he was chief minister there, cleared several field trials for 
GM crops soon after taking office in New Delhi in 2014.
 
 The GM mustard developed by Delhi University scientists makes use of three genes 
already incorporated in rapeseed hybrids in Canada, the United States and 
Australia.
 
 Extensive biosafety tests have revealed no cause for concern, according to a 
field trial report submitted to the government and seen by Reuters.
 
 (Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Tom Hogue)
 
				 
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