The European Union moved closer to approving the cultivation of a second genetically modified corn on the continent despite years of objections by environmental groups and widespread apprehension about GMO food among European consumers.
Wednesday's approval by the EU Commission, the bloc's executive arm, now sends the plan to approve DuPont-Pioneer Maize 1507 to the EU's 28 member nations for consideration and could lead to a decision on the issue within months.
EU member states have sharply diverging views on the cultivation of Genetically Modified Organisms commonly known as GMOs and decisions have been often been deadlocked for years. A continued stalemate over the next few months would throw the issue back to the Commission, which could then make the decision itself.
Since DuPont Pioneer had first applied for approval to commercialise the cultivation in Europe 12 years ago, it welcomed the latest step.
"1507 maize meets all EU regulatory requirements and should be approved for cultivation without further delay," the company said in a statement.