Towards social acceptability of genome-edited plants in industrialised countries? Emerging evidence from Europe, United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan.

IF 4.9 Q1 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Armin Spök, Thorben Sprink, Andrew C Allan, Tomiko Yamaguchi, Christian Dayé
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

The agricultural biotechnology world has been divided into two blocks; countries adopting GM crops for commercial cultivation (adopters) and others without any or without relevant cultivation of such crops (non-adopters). Meanwhile, an increasing number of adopter countries have exempted certain genome-edited (GE) crops from legal GMO pre-market approval and labelling requirements. Among them are major exporters of agricultural commodities such as United States, Canada, and Australia. Due to the relaxed legislation more GE plants are expected to enter the market soon. Many countries in the non-adopter group, however, depend on import of large volumes of agricultural commodities from adopter countries. Unlike first generation GM, certain GE crops cannot be identified as unambiguously originating from genome editing using available techniques. Consequently, pressure is mounting on non-adopter jurisdictions to reconsider their policies and legislations. Against this backdrop, the paper explores recent developments relevant for social acceptability in selected non-adopters, Japan, New Zealand, the EU, Norway, and Switzerland in contrast to United States, Canada, and Australia. While Japan is already opening-up and Norway and Switzerland are discussing revisions of their policies, the EU and New Zealand are struggling with challenges resulting from high court decisions. In an attempt to take a closer look into the inner dynamics of these developments, the concept of social acceptability proposed by Wüstenhagen et al. (Energy Policy, 2007, 35(5), 2683-2691) is employed. This aids the understanding of developments in the jurisdictions considered and identifies specific or cross-cutting challenges.

Abstract Image

迈向工业化国家基因组编辑植物的社会可接受性?来自欧洲、美国、加拿大、澳大利亚、新西兰和日本的新证据。
农业生物技术的世界被分为两个部分;采用转基因作物进行商业种植的国家(采纳者)和其他没有或没有相关种植转基因作物的国家(非采纳者)。与此同时,越来越多的采用基因编辑技术的国家免除了某些基因编辑作物上市前的合法批准和标签要求。其中包括美国、加拿大和澳大利亚等主要农产品出口国。由于立法的放宽,预计不久将有更多的GE工厂进入市场。然而,非采纳国的许多国家依赖从采纳国进口大量农产品。与第一代转基因不同,某些转基因作物不能被确定为使用现有技术进行基因组编辑的明确来源。因此,非收养司法管辖区正面临越来越大的压力,要求重新考虑其政策和立法。在此背景下,本文探讨了选定的非收养者、日本、新西兰、欧盟、挪威和瑞士与美国、加拿大和澳大利亚的社会可接受性相关的最新发展。日本已经开放,挪威和瑞士正在讨论修改政策,欧盟和新西兰正在努力应对高等法院判决带来的挑战。为了更深入地了解这些发展的内在动力,采用了w stenhagen等人(Energy Policy, 2007, 35(5), 2683-2691)提出的社会可接受性概念。这有助于了解所考虑的司法管辖区的发展情况,并确定具体的或跨领域的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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13 weeks
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