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Viewing cable 07HANOI271, VISIT TO VIETNAM BY SENIOR AG BIOTECH ADVISOR SHARON
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| Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 07HANOI271 | 2007-02-12 09:26 | 2011-08-25 00:00 | UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY | Embassy Hanoi |
VZCZCXRO4575
RR RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM RUEHLN RUEHMA RUEHPB
DE RUEHHI #0271/01 0430926
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 120926Z FEB 07
FM AMEMBASSY HANOI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 4594
INFO RUEHHM/AMCONSUL HO CHI MINH 2520
RUEHZS/ASEAN REGIONAL FORUM COLLECTIVE
RUEHZN/ENVIRONMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY COLLECTIVE
RUEHRC/DEPT OF AGRICULTURE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 1163
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 05 HANOI 000271
SIPDIS
STATE PASS TO EAP/MLS, EEB/TCC, and EEB/TPP/ABT
STATE PASS TO USTR DBISBEE
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: TBIO OTRA EAGR ETRD EAID KPAO VM
SUBJECT: VISIT TO VIETNAM BY SENIOR AG BIOTECH ADVISOR SHARON
WIENER
Ref: Hanoi 198
HANOI 00000271 001.2 OF 005
SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. PLEASE PROTECT ACCORDINGLY.
¶1. (SBU) Summary: Senior Advisor for Agricultural Biotechnology
Sharon Wiener visited Vietnam from January 23 to 26 during an
important moment in the country's agbiotech development. The
advance of agbiotech is an official national priority in Vietnam.
In August 2005, the Prime Minister issued a decree which for the
first time addresses the testing and commercialization of
biotechnology products. Drafting of implementing regulations,
however, has proceeded slowly. The Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development (MARD) expects the regulations on field trials to
be issued by March. Still, a conflict with the Ministry of Health
(MOH) and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE)
over environmental, food and feed safety standards will delay the
regulations allowing for commercialization until an unspecified
later date. Moreover, a shallow knowledge base, poor facilities,
and the institutional biases of leaders at MOH and the Vietnam Food
Administration (VFA) are holding up development of the industry.
Despite the delay, Vietnamese officials were generally receptive to
Ms. Wiener's message urging the adoption of transparent, predictable
and science-based regulations (including effective protection of
intellectual property rights) that would allow quick development of
the biotechnology industry. Following the visit, Vietnam's
immediate need is for a technical assistance project to help the GVN
finish drafting its regulations. Post submitted such a proposal on
January 30 (reftel). End Summary.
¶2. (U) Ms. Wiener visited Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) and Hanoi on
January 22 to 26 to promote the development of agricultural
biotechnology and urge the government of Vietnam to implement its
ambitious biotechnology goals and develop regulations that would
serve to facilitate the commercialization of the industry. Her
meetings were as follows:
In HCMC:
-- Institute of Agricultural Technology of Southern Vietnam
-- Biotechnology Center of HCMC
-- Quang Dung Company (distributor of Bunge Grains)
-- Genetics and Gene Bank Department of Cuu Long Rice Research
Institute
-- Institute of Tropical Biology
-- Vietnam Cotton Company
-- Monsanto
-- Local media
In Hanoi:
-- Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Vice-Minister)
-- Ministry of Science and Technology (Vice-Minister)
-- Ministry of Foreign Affairs
-- Office of the Government (the Prime Minister's Office)
-- Vietnam Food Administration (under the MOH)
-- Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources
-- University of Agriculture No. 1
-- National Seed Company (VINASEED)
-- National Agriculture Institute
-- Vietnam Agriculture Academy of Sciences
-- Local media
GVN POSITION ON AGBIOTECH - SOME INTERNAL CONFLICT
--------------------------------------------- ------
¶3. (SBU) The GVN officially has identified the development of
biotechnology as a national priority and set specific (and very
ambitious) goals for agbiotech production. The Prime Minister
approved in August 2005 Decree 212 that for the first time creates a
legal framework for the approval of biotechnology products. The
GVN's naming biotech as one of four priority technology sectors for
2007 has helped to boost the development of the industry. Decree
212 includes terms on the holding of both field trials and food and
feed safety certification. The decree delegates overall
coordination to the Ministry of Natural Resources and the
Environment (MONRE) but provides the Ministries of Health (MOH),
Science and Technology (MOST), and Agriculture and Rural Development
(MARD) with oversight on various aspects of the commercial use of
biotech products. Despite the ambitious nature of Decree 212, the
Government of Vietnam (GVN) has still not issued its implementing
regulations, which will contain field trial instructions and lay out
safety and environmental standards for product approval. Field
trials and legal commercial production of biotechnology products can
only begin once the implementing regulations are promulgated, a
process that will require review by relevant GVN Ministries. MARD
will regulate field tests, review results and certify biotech crops
HANOI 00000271 002.2 OF 005
for production. The MOH has purview over food safety certification,
required prior to sale. Later in 2007, the GVN, with MONRE in the
lead, will also draft a new biodiversity law to be passed by the
National Assembly.
¶4. (SBU) The regulation drafting process meant that Ms. Wiener's
visit came at a critical moment for biotech in Vietnam, particularly
because a conflict has emerged in recent months between pro-biotech
sectors of government (including officials at MARD, the Office of
the Government (OOG), research institutions and universities) and
more cautious elements (within MOH, MONRE, and the Vietnam Food
Administration (VFA). While all GVN officials told Ms. Wiener they
unequivocally support the development of the sector in line with the
Prime Minister's decree, the latter group wishes to impose stricter
standards regarding environmental risk assessment, as well as food
and animal feed safety, while the former is more confident as a
result of the last 11 years of biotech experience. These
differences were highlighted during a recent visit to Vietnam by Val
Giddings, a consultant for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, who
had come to Vietnam to work with officials at MARD, VFA and MONRE
with the tenth draft of the field trials regulation one week prior
to Ms. Wiener's visit. This conflict also provided the backdrop for
Ms. Wiener's meetings in both cities.
PROMOTION OF THE U.S. POSITION
------------------------------
¶5. (SBU) Ms. Wiener began her meetings with a short introduction on
U.S. policy on agricultural biotechnology. The United States State
Department created the Senior Biotech Advisor position because the
technology has the potential to have a deep, positive impact on the
developing world and on food security, which are foreign policy
priorities of the United States, Ms. Wiener said. With the world's
population continuing to grow and environmental concerns mounting,
the adoption of biotechnology (BT) in agriculture can help countries
grow more food on less land and with less water. It also allows for
decreased pesticide use. Ms. Wiener also noted some of the key
statistics outlined in the 2006 annual report by the International
Service for the Adoption of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA)
report. For example, more than 90 percent of the 10 million farmers
growing biotech crops last year were small farmers from the
developing world.
¶6. (SBU) Turning to issues in Vietnam, Ms. Wiener congratulated her
counterparts for Vietnam's recent WTO entry, noting the importance
of drafting transparent, predictable and science-based regulations
consistent with the country's WTO commitments. She noted that
Vietnam has the potential to become a leader in agricultural
biotechnology for Southeast Asia, but only if Vietnamese regulations
take due regard of product safety and facilitate approvals rather
than create obstacles that discourage the industry. Emphasizing
that no scientific studies had found BT crops to be harmful to human
health in any way, Ms. Wiener reiterated throughout her discussions
the importance of public opinion. Developing the industry will be
difficult if inaccurate information on biotechnology is allowed to
take root, she said. Ms. Wiener also raised the recent WTO ruling
on the biotech case which the United States, Argentina and Canada
had brought against the EU. The WTO's ruling in favor of the U.S.
and its co-complainants should send a signal to countries like
Vietnam that efforts to restrict trade in biotech products were
inconsistent with the WTO. She also noted figures in the recent
ISAAA report indicating a five-fold increase in genetically modified
(GM) crop acreage in Europe from 2005-2006.
¶7. (SBU) Ms. Wiener also urged officials to approve regulations
quickly so that field trials and commercialization can start soon.
The standards for already tested products such as BT corn should be
lower than those for new, untested products that Vietnam developed,
she asserted, noting that Monsanto has an application pending (in
conjunction with the HCMC Agriculture Genetic Institute and
Biotechnology Center) for field trials of Roundup Ready Corn. The
greatest risk, she concluded, was that Vietnam would not take
advantage of agricultural biotechnology, foregoing the clear
benefits these products provide just as Vietnam's agriculture
industry needs to become more competitive as a member of the WTO.
Ms. Wiener commended officials for the GVN's efforts on agbiotech
thus far. She noted the active Vietnamese participation in the
recent APEC High Level Policy Dialogue on Agricultural Biotechnology
and urged Vietnam to coordinate with other countries that might
serve as models, in particular the Philippines, as it took its next
steps to further its biotech agenda. She asked all her interlocutors
about their sense of the government's progress on the issuance of
regulations for Decree 212. The following paragraphs outline her
discussions with key officials.
HANOI 00000271 003.2 OF 005
MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE
-----------------------
¶8. (SBU) Ms. Wiener's meeting with MARD Vice Minister Bui Baa Bong
demonstrated that he is a strong advocate of agricultural
biotechnology, though the Ministry's planned timeline for
development of ag biotech products is slower than expected.
Regarding the regulatory framework, Bong said MARD aims to finish
the implementing regulations for field trials in March. The
Ministry aims to have commercialization of biotech crops by 2011,
widespread cultivation by 2015 and 70 percent cultivation of
approved biotech crops by 2020. Though pleased about the impending
issuance of regulations, Ms. Wiener stressed that the timeline was
"slower and more pessimistic" than she had expected. Foreign firms
have said they may not be willing to remain in Vietnam if
commercialization cannot start soon, she stressed. Bong, however,
pushed back, saying that "history is long." "We would like to run
fast, but we are weak." Bong then added that if the United States
wants Vietnam to move faster, it will have to provide the GVN with
resources to do so.
¶9. (SBU) Vice Minister Bong noted that the ministry was considering
two options for field trials: allow either three biotech crops to be
tested, or just one. The three crops would be cotton, soybean and
maize, though he stressed it was possible that only one crop would
be approved, Bong said. (Note: It is understood that this crop
would be cotton. Experts believe Vietnam already grows as much as
20,000 hectares of pirated biotech cotton, likely smuggled from
India, which Vietnam wants to legalize. Monsanto told Ms. Wiener in
HCMC it has no interest in working in Vietnam with biotech cotton
because its intellectual property rights for biotech cotton could
not be guaranteed. Because Vietnam is the world's second largest
rice exporter, and does not wish to risk its markets in Japan and
the European Union, it is not likely to include biotech rice as a
test crop at this time. None of the other three products, however,
would present biotech export challenges for Vietnam; cotton is not a
food product, while neither maize nor soy is exported. End Note.)
When Ms. Wiener asked Bong if an expedited approval process could be
applied to imported biotech products which have already been found
safe and approved in other countries, Mr. Bong said, "This is under
consideration."
¶10. (SBU) Throughout the meeting, Mr. Bong stressed "the gap between
the government's promises and its ability" to move forward on
biotech, noting the GVN's deficits in human resources, facilities
and regulations. The GVN is open to United States assistance, he
said, asking for assistance to 1) identify universities which could
receive and give tuition "discounts" to Vietnamese students; 2)
consult on biosafety and risk assessment, including reviewing
Vietnamese draft regulations; and 3) to identify and develop
research projects. In regard to item one, Bong said, the government
plans to send 60 students for master's degrees and doctorates in the
United States this year. The GVN also needs assistance building
facilities and drafting regulations, he said.
THE MINISTRY OF HEALTH: "A BIG MESS"
------------------------------------
¶11. (SBU) The MOH and the VFA (under the ministry as the equivalent
of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration) provide the greatest
impediment to the widespread adoption of commercial biotech in
Vietnam, many observers told Ms. Wiener. Decree 212 gives MOH
responsibility for food safety approval of biotech products. A
shallow knowledge base, poor facilities, and the institutional
biases of leaders at both institutions curb their enthusiasm. VFA
Director Tran Dang is particularly hostile to commercial
biotechnology, said Weraphon Charoenpanit, Chief Representative for
Monsanto in HCMC. "The Minister of Health (Tran Tri Trung Chien)
does not want to have GM food in Vietnam," added Le Huy Ham, the
acting Director General of the Institute of Agricultural Genetics at
the Vietnam Academy of Agriculture Sciences in Hanoi. Dr. Bui Chi
Buu, Director of the Southern Vietnam Institute of Agricultural
Technology, also blamed a lack of technical capacity and desire to
obtain more research funding for the MOH's reluctance to move
forward.
¶12. (SBU) Notwithstanding differences of opinion, the tone of Ms.
Wiener's meeting with VFA was positive. Deputy Director Nguyen Hung
Long stated unequivocally: "We have no problem with GMOs
(genetically modified organisms), but we have to prepare guidelines
on a scientific basis." He also admitted frankly that the agency
was hampered by a lack of knowledge about biotechnology. Still,
Long defended a set of positions including rigorous testing for
HANOI 00000271 004.2 OF 005
imported products and biotech product labeling. Ms. Wiener noted
that no adverse health effects had ever been demonstrated from BT
products currently approved for commercialization, but Long noted
that decree 212 directed officials to "confirm" product safety. He
defended labeling on the basis of the public's "right to know" about
"a totally new product." Ms. Wiener pointed out that in the U.S.,
there is no requirement to label the process. Ms. Wiener added that
the VFA should try to avoid creating a regulatory regime that was so
cumbersome that it would be economically prohibitive to plant or
sell biotech crops. Despite these differences, VFA officials
expressed a clear desire for greater cooperation with the United
States to help overcome their lack of information as they sought to
develop food safety guidelines. Ms. Wiener noted that the United
States looks forward to working with the Vietnamese administration
on the issue.
PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS ON BIOTECH: A "BLANK PAGE," FOR NOW
--------------------------------------------- ---------
¶13. (SBU) While promulgating a regulatory regime is Vietnam's most
immediate issue, the shadow of public perception of biotech products
hung over Ms. Wiener's meetings. In HCMC, officials told her public
opinion was unimportant due to the top-down policy making process in
Vietnam. Ms. Wiener repeatedly emphasized that while public opinion
may not seem to be an important driver of policy in Vietnam, the
issue of the public opinion of biotech was vital in a market economy
where consumer preferences dominate. While currently Vietnam is a
"blank page" in terms of public perceptions of biotechnology,
pro-biotech organizations need to act fast before groups hostile to
biotech begin to act, said Biotechnology Center Deputy Director Binh
in HCMC.
¶14. (U) Local HCMC media who spoke with Ms. Wiener and officials at
the Institute for Tropical Biotechnology were not well-versed in
biotech issues, but expressed their interest in spending more time
with Ms. Weiner and learning more about the future of biotech in
Vietnam. The Consulate General has to date seen little follow-up,
however, with only a short piece in Tuoi Tre (Youth) online
newspaper about Ms. Wiener's visit, and a promised upcoming feature
on biotech crops to appear on VietnamNet.
¶15. (U) Journalists who attended her roundtable discussion in Hanoi
on January 26 seemed more familiar with biotech issues and raised a
number of good questions during her one hour press interaction. Ms.
Wiener provided an excellent background of U.S. biotech efforts and
an overview of our cooperation with Vietnam on various technical
issues, including regulation development. The journalists,
representing several major publications and a prominent online news
service, raised issues such as EU concerns about biotech crops, U.S.
assistance toward Vietnam's development of biotechnology, and some
of the major challenges facing Vietnam in this arena. Coverage was
good over the weekend, with several papers printing summaries of her
visit and press event. Nong Thon Ngay Nay included a large portion
of the interview transcript with the headline, "Vietnam Has
Potential to Develop Genetically Modified Crops."
¶16. (SBU) Officials at MONRE hinted that biotech opponents had
approached them. The VFA's statements on health risks and the
consumer's right to know were reminiscent of the arguments commonly
put forward by BT opponents. Still, MONRE officials noted they had
"their own ideas," and were not easily swayed. Officials at both
the Office of the Government (also known as the Prime Minister's
Office) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs eagerly agreed with Ms.
Wiener's assessment that a strong public information campaign must
be mounted in Vietnam to set a positive course for biotech opinion.
The officials had no concrete plans for these campaigns, however.
¶17. (SBU) Seed companies noted that demand from farmers is also
minimal. Ly Anh Dung, Director of Quang Dung Company, an importer
of soy and corn, cited a lack of information on biotech as the
reason. He posited that this could change, however, when farmers
see proof of the benefits that commercial biotech crops offer.
INDUSTRY CONCERNS
-----------------
¶18. (SBU) Ms. Wiener's meetings with foreign biotechnology companies
demonstrated that they are unlikely to remain active in the country
for long unless the GVN takes a more proactive approach to
protecting intellectual property rights (IPR). She advised that the
field trial risk assessment and food and feed safety standards, and
the speed by which commercialization can begin, will be key for
foreign investors. In HCMC, Monsanto criticized the GVN's lack of
HANOI 00000271 005.2 OF 005
IPR protections and accused state-owned enterprises of attempting to
steal products for use and distribution. The firm told Ms. Wiener
it has no interest in testing or selling genetically modified cotton
because biotech cotton is already being cultivated illegally in
Vietnam. During Ms. Wiener's visit to the Vietnam Cotton
Corporation (VCC), the firm confirmed such cultivation. VCC
indicated it had purchased biotech cotton grown in Vietnam and
received funding by the GVN to develop additional genetically
modified strains.
¶19. (SBU) While officials admitted weak IPR protections and MARD,
VFA and others did not know what standards would apply to imported
biotech product, officials -- particularly in the OOG -- expressed a
positive attitude toward foreign investors. "We want to move
forward, and if we have to rely on Vietnamese scientists, this will
take a very long time," said Pham Quoc Doanh, the Deputy Director of
the Department of Agriculture at the OOG. Doanh pointed out that
the Prime Minister had emphasized three important tasks for 2007 --
to achieve high-growth, to carry out administrative reform and to
fight corruption -- and said these priorities would benefit
agbiotech. "In case you know of investors facing problems with
administrative procedures, ask them to forward their cases to the
OOG," he said.
Comment
--------
¶20. (SBU) Ms. Wiener's visit comes at a time when a small amount of
well placed assistance can be leveraged for long-term benefits.
While the USG is playing a positive role in shaping GVN policy, we
need to continue working with the GVN to ensure that regulations are
written which facilitate biotech development. Post has submitted a
proposal (Reftel) for use of EB's FY 2007 Agriculture Biotech
Outreach Funds to assist with GVN's drafting of biotech regulations.
End Comment.
¶21. (U) Senior Advisor Wiener cleared this cable.
ALOISI