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- (-) Soybeans
- (-) November 2013
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By the end of 2014, Poland’s parliament is expected to complete comprehensive legislation on agricultural biotechnology.
Although Ecuador maintains a number of anti-biotech laws and regulations, there is minimal enforcement, and trade in cotton and soybean products continues.
While EU demand for imported soybeans has fallen, the U.S. industry adjusted to meet rising demand elsewhere in the world.
Brazil is the world's second-largest producer of biotech crops. Post forecasts a 10-percent increase in area planted to biotech crops in the upcoming 2013/14 Brazilian crop year (October-September).
Honduras is the only country in Central America that allows commercial production and field trials of agricultural biotech crops.
China is expected to remain a significant importer of biotech products and may become an exporter of biotechnology in the medium to long term.
Colombia continues to expand its biotechnology frontier. The adoption rate for biotech corn has surpassed that of cotton and the development of a regulatory framework is underway.
Kazakhstan's draft biotech law could remain stalled until the country's WTO accession. Meanwhile, new Customs Union regulations address labeling and import of biotech products.
Recent high-profile activism against biotechnology has created uncertainty among those involved in production and research of biotechnology products in Costa Rica.
El Salvador has no legal restriction on the use of agricultural biotechnology. However the country's biotech regulatory framework is still being developed.
The Colombian government has communicated no clear vision for biofuels policies despite promises to increase blend mandates as new production facilities come online in 2015.