U.S. GMO food labeling bill passes Senate
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[July 08, 2016]
By Chris Prentice
(Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on Thursday
approved legislation that would for the first time require food to carry
labels listing genetically-modified ingredients, which labeling
supporters say could create loopholes for some U.S. crops.
The Senate voted 63-30 for the bill that would display GMO
contents with words, pictures or a bar code that can be scanned with
smartphones. The U.S. Agriculture Department (USDA) would decide
which ingredients would be considered genetically modified.
The measure now goes to the House of Representatives, where it is
expected to pass.
Drawing praise from farmers, the bill sponsored by Republican
Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas and Democrat Senator Debbie Stabenow
of Michigan is the latest attempt to introduce a national standard
that would override state laws, including Vermont's that some say is
more stringent, and comes amid growing calls from consumers for
greater transparency.
"This bipartisan bill ensures that consumers and families throughout
the United States will have access, for the first time ever, to
information about their food through a mandatory, nationwide label
for food products with GMOs," Stabenow said in a statement.
A nationwide standard is favored by the food industry, which says
state-by-state differences could inflate costs for labeling and
distribution. But mandatory GMO labeling of any kind would still be
seen as a loss for Big Food, which has spent millions lobbying
against it.
 Farmers lobbied against the Vermont law, worrying that labeling
stigmatizes GMO crops and could hurt demand for food containing
those ingredients, but have applauded this law.
Critics like Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont,
say the bill's vague language and allowance for electronic labels
for scanning could limit its scope and create confusion.
"When parents go to the store and purchase food, they have the right
to know what is in the food their kids are going to be eating,"
Sanders said on the floor of the Senate ahead of the vote.
He said at a news conference this week that major food manufacturers
have already begun labeling products with GMO ingredients to meet
the new law in his home state.
Another opponent of the bill, Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley of
Oregon, said it would institute weak federal requirements making it
virtually impossible for consumers to access information about GMOs.
LOOPHOLES
Food ingredients like beet sugar and soybean oil, which can be
derived from genetically-engineered crops but contain next to no
genetic material by the time they are processed, may not fall under
the law's definition of a bioengineered food, critics say.
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A customer picks up produce near a sign supporting a ballot
initiative in Washington state that would require labelling of foods
containing genetically modified crops at the Central Co-op in
Seattle, Washington October 29, 2013. REUTERS/Jason Redmond

GMO corn may also be excluded thanks to ambiguous language, some
said.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) raised concerns about
the involvement of the USDA in a list of worries sent in a June 27
memo to the Senate Agriculture Committee.
In a letter to Stabenow last week, the USDA's general counsel tried
to quell those worries, saying it would include commercially-grown
GMO corn, soybeans, sugar and canola crops.
The vast majority of corn, soybeans and sugar crops in the United
States are produced from genetically-engineered seeds. The domestic
sugar market has been strained by rising demand for non-GMO
ingredients like cane sugar.
The United States is the world's largest market for foods made with
genetically altered ingredients. Many popular processed foods are
made with soybeans, corn and other biotech crops whose genetic
traits have been manipulated, often to make them resistant to
insects and pesticides.
"It's fair to say that it's not the ideal bill, but it is certainly
the bill that can pass, which is the most important right now," said
American Soybean Association's (ASA) director of policy
communications Patrick Delaney.
The association was part of the Coalition for Safe and Affordable
Food, which lobbied for what labeling supporters termed the Deny
Americans the Right to Know, or DARK Act, that would have made
labeling voluntary. It was blocked by the Senate in March.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice in New York; Additional reporting by
Karl Plume in Chicago, Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Kouichi
Shirayanagi and Eric Beech in Washington; Editing by Marguerita Choy
and Ed Davies)
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