India panel pushes commercial use of first GM food crop

epa05646517 An Indian farmer holds a hoe as he walks in a mustard field at village Fatahpur near Amritsar, India, 25 November 2016. Mustard, formerly dubbed the pepper of the poor man, is a versatile seed and a basic ingredient in Indian cuisine.  EPA/RAMINDER PAL SINGH

Bloomberg

An Indian environment ministry panel recommended to the government that it allow cultivation of a genetically-modified mustard variety, taking it closer to becoming the country’s first GM food crop for commercial production.
The federal government will make a final decision in this regard, said Amita Prasad, an additional secretary with the environment ministry and chairman of the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee.
The recommendation follows the government’s rejection in 2010 of a GM Brinjal crop developed by Maharashtra Hybrid Seeds Co. A government panel said last year that the GM oilseed poses no risk to humans. It is highly unlikely to invade natural ecosystems and poses negligible risk to agriculture productivity, the panel had said in a document posted to the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change’s website.
The engineered mustard, developed by the University of Delhi, will raise production of India’s biggest winter-sown oilseed crop and help processors to increase their capacity utilization and reduce dependence on imported oil, said B.V. Mehta, executive director of the Solvent Extractors’ Association of India. Oilseed crushers in the country currently use as much as 35 percent of their capacity, he said.
Some farmer associations said they want the government to immediately allow cultivation of genetically- modified mustard to help them boost production.
“There is already a huge delay in approval of genetically-modified mustard,” said Chengal Reddy, chief adviser to the Consortium of Indian Farmers Association that represents 40 million farmers in the country.
“We are already importing soybean and canola oils produced from genetically-
modified seeds. Has there been any adverse effect?”
Mustard oil, produced from crops planted in October and November, accounts for about 10 percent of India’s cooking requirement of about 21 million metric tons. Its yellow-colored oil is the third-most used cooking oil in the country behind palm oil and soybean oil.
India accounts for about 9 percent to 10 percent of global production, according to G.G. Patel, managing partner of GGN Research. The yield of Indian mustard is only 28 percent of the level in the European Union, 45 percent of Canada and 53 percent of China, he said.

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