Turkey Cancels Anti-Biotech Regulation, Restores
Importation of U.S. Soy
Today Turkey’s Agriculture Ministry sent an official order to the
ports and other parties that the Ministry was officially informed by
the Council of State that the Biotech Regulation dated Oct. 26, 2009
was cancelled. The Oct. 26 regulation on biotechnology and its
amendments are null and void as of now, and the controls on feed and
food import will be carried out as per conditions before Oct. 26.
Soybeans that are currently stored in bonded warehouses in Turkey
as they awaited import permission can now be imported into Turkey.
The Oct. 26 biotechnology regulation banned the import of any
biotech product unless it was accompanied by official documentation
showing that any biotech event in a shipment had been registered and
commercially available in the originating country for a period of
three years. The American Soybean Association (ASA) was concerned that
this requirement would effectively halt U.S. soy exports to Turkey
because two new soybean biotech varieties were commercialized just
this year.
ASA has worked closely with the U.S. government, the American
Soybean Association International Marketing (ASA-IM) and U.S. Soybean
Export Council (USSEC) staffs, as well as other impacted industries,
to find a solution to the situation that temporarily shut down almost
$1 billion worth of U.S. exports to Turkey.
Turkey is an important importer of U.S. soybeans and soybean
products. In the 2008/2009 marketing year, the U.S. exported over
690,000 metric tons of soybeans and over 223,000 metric tons of
soybean meal to Turkey with a combined value of over $370 million.