Nation vows to keep up with transgenics
Updated: 2014-01-23 01:24
By ZHAO HUANXIN and JIN ZHU (China Daily)
|
||||||||
China will strive to keep up with the world's transgenic technology development while maintaining rigorous standards for genetically modified food and keeping consumers well informed about such food, the country's top agricultural authority said on Wednesday.
"In the field of (transgenic) molecular-scale seed breeding technology, which is in the vanguard of the world's life science, we as a large agricultural country cannot fall behind," said Chen Xiwen, deputy chief of the Central Rural Work Leading Group.
"In research we must strive to keep up with the advanced level in the world," the senior rural planner for the central government said while answering a question from China Daily at a news conference.
He said China ranks second or third in the world in terms of area devoted to GM crops, which have been a controversial issue globally.
Biosafety certificates have been issued in China for some GM strains of cotton, rice, corn and papaya, with only the cotton and papaya allowed to be planted for commercial purposes, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.
Import certificates for GM crops in China have been granted only for soybeans, corn, rapeseed, cotton and beets, allowing them to be imported as raw materials for domestic processing, it said.
Chen said a GM product must undergo strict examination to ensure it has no side effects before it can be approved for market entry.
Any farm produce containing GM ingredients must be labeled clearly. "We stick to two points for GM food — strict safety assessment and checks, and sufficient information for consumers," Chen said.
He also said he believes it is unlikely that China will introduce GM rice planting on a commercial basis, adding, "We still need to do more research on this."
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Smog descends on the 'two sessions' agendas |
From TV title to national policy |
Entertainment: Console ban? |
Traditional skiing lives on |
China's moves against smoking |
Shangri-la assets lost forever after town blaze |
Today's Top News
Export adds to air blight
China approves 12 more free trade zones
Li calls for cooperative global economic system
China to keep up with transgenics
VP calls for cooperation with US
Big rise in Chinese overseas
Obama, Putin discuss Olympics security in call
Smog descends on the 'two sessions' agendas
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |