The poultry traders and importers of Soybean seeds have created an exploitative hullabaloo at the national level pertaining to halt of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) seeds as the importers were illicitly importing the soybean seeds without meeting the legal formalities and protocols.
Additional Secretary of the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmental Coordination, Musadik Ahmed Malik on Wednesday informed the National Assembly Standing Committee on Climate Change and Environmental Coordination presided by MNA Nuzhat Pathan that in 1995 GMOs were introduced to create pest and weather-resistant crops.
The chairperson raised the query before the Ministry of Climate Change pertaining to the alleged deliberate halt of soybean seeds causing economic damage to the poultry industry and an increase in the price of broiler chicken. Setting the historical context, he said there were two lobbies one opposing and the other supporting the GMOs.
However, later the Cartagena Convention was formulated in Spain and all countries made a commitment that they would report to the international biosafety house to report the transboundary movement of GMOs.
In Pakistan, the cultivation regime after 2005 introduced locally produced BT Cotton GMOs based seeds, and it was the only genetically modified crop prevailing in the country and there were no other GMOs locally produced or cultivated.
Soybean seeds were imported to produce oil and its husk was used for making poultry feed as it had high protein which was good for the fast growth of chicks, he added.
“In Pakistan, there is no import without a licence. From 2015 till date none of the importers took licence for importing soybean seeds. The US is the biggest exporter of GMOs-based soybean and canola, and it is not a signatory to Cartagena Protocol,” he added.
The Customs Department on suspicion in 2022 tested two consignments of soybean seeds that were found GMOs whereas it was necessary to hold risk assessment to obtain a licence and in order to circumvent the cumbersome ordeal of risk assessment the importers used illicit means, he added.
The federal cabinet gave directions to revisit rules and improve the regulatory regime for safe human consumption of GMOs whereas the ministry engaged biotechnology scientists in an aggressive consultative session on the matter, the MoCC official said.
The scientist’s opinion was that since 1995 GMOs’ human consumption was underway in the US most of the products were GMO-based and heavily consumed at the local level. The countries importing it were also using and there were no harmful impacts reported, so it was safe for human consumption, he added.
Since its developers are far ahead of Pakistan in GMOs risk assessment there was no need to develop a local risk assessment mechanism and therefore the ministry decided to amend the rules and engage stakeholders like the Ministry of Food Security, he said.
Musadiq Khan said Pakistan had soybean seed alternates in the country and there was no shortage of poultry feed raw material. The Food Ministry claimed that there would be no shortage of chicken feed whereas the importers and poultry farmers exploited the matter, he alleged.
The rules amendment summary was submitted to the Cabinet Committee on Legislative Amendments on July 10th and it suggested that keeping in view the local risk assessment of the US FDA and EPA a one-time licence for three years with the condition of local risk assessment for mandatory to review and renewal of the licence would be awarded to an importer, he said.