The “Ohne Gentechnik” segment of the agriculture, processing, trading and marketing industries is booming in many European countries. But products made with new genetic engineering methods pose a massive economic threat to that segment. Consistent with the European Court of Justice (ECJ)’s ruling, the “Ohne Gentechnik” business sector advocates that all products made with the new genetic engineering methods be regulated as “genetically engineered”. Germany’s VLOG and Austria’s ARGE Gentechnik-frei made this clear in the EU Commission’s stakeholder survey in the spring of 2020. A summary of our responses can be found in this document.
Non-GMO Summit: Conference of the European "Non-GMO" Industry
On 21 April 2026, the EU Member States formally approved the planned dilution of EU regulations on New Genetic Engineering (NGT) by a very narrow qualified majority; it is due to be finally ratified by the European Parliament in May. How can and will the food industry deal with NGT in GMO-free feed and food chains in the future? This pressing question is the focus of the third international Non-GMO Summit on 13 May 2026 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Focus on Contamination Risks: EU Field Trials and Reported GM Risks in 2025
With 27 approved field trials of genetically modified crops in six European countries, as well as 10 notifications via the Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF), there were several additional risks of contamination with genetically modified organisms (GMOs) for "Ohne Gentechnik" (Non-GMO) production in 2025.