The government is pushing for amendments in Executive Order
(EO) 430 in an aim to harmonize regulations in biotechnology
products and coordinate cluttered efforts in promoting biotechnology
as a means to battle hunger.
The Department of Agriculture (DA) is filing an amendment
to EO 430, the law governing biosafety policies which created
the National Committee on Biosafety of the Philippines (NCBP).
The changes will hopefully speed up approval processes for
biotechnology products and at the same time inform consumers
on potential benefits and risk in these products.
"This will harmonize government's activities including
DA, DENR (Department of Environment and Natural Resources),
DoST (Department of Science and Technology," said Saturnina
C. Halos, chairman of the Department of Agriculture's Biotechnology
Advisory Team, in an interview.
The NCBP is the monitoring body that approves testing of
biotechnology products particularly genetically modified
(GM) crops and assesses their impact on human health and
environment through greenhouse and field testing.
Strengthening biosafety policies is believed to be important
even as GM crops are seen as hope to increase yield, raise
farmers' income, solve problems on poverty without having
to adversely affect environmental sustainability.
Since the NCBP is under the DoST at present although it
is by nature a national agency that has a national authority,
the amendment may upgrade the NCBP as a coordinating body
of a higher level body since it needs to link at least three
cabinet-level agencies -DA, DENR, and DoST.
New stakeholders will also be involved as members of the
NCBP, particularly non-government organizations (NGO) and
consumers, in consideration to NGO's contribution to the
sector and the product safety's impact to consumers, according
to Charo Ampil, DA chief on legislative matters.
The strengthened NCBP will also settle differences on governments's
position on the issuance of Environmental Impact Assessment
(EIA) which is being required by DENR for producers of biotechnology
products.
The coherence in the activity of government institutions,
NGOs, and consumer groups is needed, Halos said, in order
to come up with better information on the benefits of new
technologies on food, feed, and consumer products.
"In the past, one government agency will present a
position before an international conference that is different
from the position of another government agency. And then
because of government's lack of money, an NGO will send its
representative to an international event which also has a
different opinion," Halos said.
Somehow the new coordinating body may also help coordinate
with local government units (LGUs) on the use of new technologies
in order to raise farmers' income, at least through as some
LGUs have issued a moratorium on the testing of biotechnology
products, particularly GM crops.