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POLST 362.3 The IPE of Biotechnology

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RA complicated by probabilistic, hypothetical and speculative science. Domestic regulatory systems: ... Establish mostly science-based standards for plants, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POLST 362.3 The IPE of Biotechnology


1
POLST 362.3 The IPE of Biotechnology
  • Lecture 7
  • Regulation

2
POLST 362.3
  • Introduction
  • Remember, IPE involves two broad areas of
    inquiry
  • Gains/losses for a state from International
    Integration
  • Governance of International Integration
  • Next two lectures focus on related policy issues
  • Promotion
  • Regulation

3
POLST 362.3
4
POLST 362.3
  • Regulation has multiple goals
  • public good failures health and safety
    environmental safety
  • common pool goods property rights
  • market failures competition law
  • social reasons income distribution, ethics,
    social impact

5
POLST 362
  • The risk analysis challenge
  • Health and safety and environmental
    sustainability
  • Conventional Risk Hazard x Exposure
  • New Risk Hazard x Exposure x Outrage
  • Hazard assessment challenge
  • Exposure management challenge
  • Outrage communication challenge
  • RA complicated by probabilistic, hypothetical and
    speculative science

6
POLST 362
  • Domestic regulatory systems
  • Uneven/incomplete regulatory systems
  • Health assessments international scientific
    consensus but limited capacity to assess re diet
  • Environmental control 88 signed CBD 75 have
    quarantine 48 seed certification and 20 seed
    quality 72 have research base (13 basic 38
    developing 21 advanced)
  • Many in Africa/Asia have limited technical
    capacity

7
POLST 362.3
Dueling regulatory models
8
POLST 362
  • Canadas regulatory system
  • reflects NA model
  • highly integrated sometimes hard to identify
    where public oversight ends and private action
    takes over
  • takes 2-7 years to satisfy

9
POLST 362
10
POLST 362
Fuzzy line between public and private regulation
11
POLST 362
  • EU making efforts to open system
  • ban since October 1998
  • scientific studies released in 2001
  • 2001/18/EC prosecutions of 7 states
  • measures to extend labeling/traceability
  • EU FSA
  • 2010 vision for life sciences/biotech

12
POLST 362
  • Possible WTO challenge of EU
  • EU suspended approvals since 1998 some approvals
    in abeyance against EU decisions
  • EU requires labeling above 0.9 but moving to
    traceability some countries ban GMOs
  • EU has not conducted risk assessment recent
    studies do not support bans/labels no basis for
    the 0.9 tolerance based on science

13
POLST 362
  • Potential outcome of WTO challenge
  • EU at risk for all three points
  • Absence of international consensus through Codex
    or IPPC could weaken US case
  • If EU loses, it could try to implement interim
    ban/labeling as precautionary measure and do RA
  • EU might ignore decision (hormones case precedent)

14
POLST 362
  • Biotechnology and trade
  • 40 modifications involving 13 crops approved
  • 130 million acres in 13 countries in 2001
  • GM production concentrated (99 in US, Argentina,
    Canada and China) in exporting countries (up to
    88 of trade from GM producers)
  • Up to 177 countries could be importing GMOs
  • Most of exports for food, feed and processing and
    not for propagation

15
POLST 362
Global GM production and trade
16
POLST 362
  • GMO presence in foods
  • Some say up to 70-80 of foods has GMOs
  • recent work in Canada shows
  • 38 of all foods GM free due to categories (dry
    pasta, flours not containing corn or flax, most
    fruits and vegetables, TOFU)
  • 62 could have GM elements but only 11 likely to
    have detectable proteins--either proteins
    removed, altered or never there

17
POLST 362
Domestic labeling systems
18
POLST 362
  • Some consensus on labeling
  • all currently require detection (EU proposing
    traceability)
  • some products exempt (e.g. additives, active
    ingredients, highly processed foods)
  • Tolerances range from 0-5
  • Widely differing enforcement systems
  • Codex having terrible time finding consensus

19
POLST 362
20
POLST 362
  • International regulatory response
  • Seven institutions attempting to develop rules
    for international trade
  • developing standards
  • developing testing protocols
  • developing rules and DSMs
  • Problem is there is no common view on the goal of
    international regulation

21
POLST 362
22
POLST 362
  • IPPC/OIE/Codex Alimentarius
  • Establish mostly science-based standards for
    plants, animals and foods
  • Takes time to develop standards (6 years in
    Codex)
  • Provide non-binding dispute avoidance system
  • Provide technical expertise to WTO in SPS and TBT
    cases
  • Nominate experts for WTO dispute panels

23
POLST 362
  • World Trade Organization
  • SPS standards allowed if and only if
  • fit with MFN and national treatment
  • conform to international standards (e.g. IPPC) or
    use scientific principles and risk assessment
  • not act as disguised barrier
  • TBT impact uncertain
  • Binding dispute settlement no precaution
  • Risk that WTO handling of GM questions will spill
    over to other issues first GM food case

24
POLST 362
  • Regional Initiatives/OECD
  • Harmonization projects to make regulatory
    processes more transparent and efficient
  • Focus on creating common science base for review
  • RIs EU-US, US-Canada, EU-Japan, EU-Canada
  • OECD 14 consensus documents related to biology
    food safety conference procedural efforts
  • Limited by regional/developed country focus

25
POLST 362
  • BioSafety Protocol
  • Requires advanced informed consent for first
    movement of LMOs for propagation, based on
    scientific risk assessment
  • Commodity trade must be notified
  • Uncertain impact with socioeconomic and
    precautionary elements no DSM
  • Capacity building in LDCs vital

26
POLST 362
  • Possible regulatory approaches
  • Broad-based issues seldom negotiated in narrow
    institutions rather consensus can be base for
    regulation in institutions
  • All use scientific risk assessment
  • All make decisions by consensus
  • All but BSP regulate products not processes
  • Patchwork arrangements may be only option

27
POLST 362
  • Other regulations
  • markets administered domestically but some
    extraterritoriality
  • intellectual property rights domestic but
    extended to WTO via TRIPS
  • competition law in patent laws and anti-trust
    legislation nationally but no international
    effect
  • social objectives distribution of benefits,
    ethical or social conformity domestically
    handled but some effort to extend internationally
    through
  • BSP
  • UNDP

28
POLST 362
  • Conclusions
  • Regulation has become highly complex, integrated
    and laden with multiple expectations
  • significant potential for regulation to appear to
    be promotion or strategic
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