February 19, 2014
Cargill, prompted by China's rejection of a variety of biotech corn last year, has rejected crops containing a newly developed genetically modified corn seed from Syngenta being sown by American farmers for the first time.
In November, China rejected a variety of biotech corn that had not been approved by the mainland authorities, forcing traders to reroute shipments to other countries, the US agricultural attache said in a report.
Corn seeds containing Syngenta's Agrisure Duracade trait had been cleared by the US last year. It has import approval from buyers including Mexico, South Korea and Japan, but has not been approved by China or the EU.
"For export contracts, we will not accept delivery of any commodity containing the Duracade trait," Cargill said, adding it "reserves the right to reject and/or require testing of deliveries" for the presence of Duracade.
China has rejected more than 600,000 tonnes of US corn and corn products containing MIR 162 which was also developed by Syngenta.










