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EFSA Proposes Streamlined Risk Assessment for Stacked GM Crops

July 15, 2026

The European Food Safety Authority's (EFSA) Panel on Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO Panel) has released a new scientific opinion that could significantly streamline the approval process for certain genetically modified (GM) crops. Published in the EFSA Journal, the paper addresses the food and feed risk assessment of GM plants containing stacked transformation events, crops created by conventionally crossing multiple independently modified plant lines to combine traits like pest resistance and herbicide tolerance.

Drawing on 20 years of cumulative risk assessment experience, the GMO Panel's fresh guidance marks a pivotal shift in how the safety of these complex, combined-trait crops is evaluated in Europe. The headline conclusion from the EFSA GMO Panel is that expensive, time-consuming field trials for comparative analysis may no longer be universally required for assessing stacked GM crops. Instead, developers may be granted a derogation or exemption from these trials under highly specific criteria. To qualify, all combined genetic modifications in the stack must express their traits exclusively through newly expressed proteins (NEPs) that do not act as metabolic modifiers. This means that if the individual GM traits have already been proven safe on their own and do not interact to alter the plant's basic metabolism, repeating field trials for the stacked combination is deemed scientifically unnecessary.

Beyond field trials, the new framework proposes that applicants may also be exempt from certain dietary exposure assessments, provided there are no underlying genetic interactions that alter the expression levels of the newly introduced proteins. To support these updated pathways, the panel has also outlined improved standards for how biotechnology companies should present their molecular characterization data. By relaxing trial requirements where the science shows no cumulative risk, the EFSA aims to modernize and accelerate the regulatory pipeline for safe agricultural innovations while maintaining strict safety standards for European consumers and the environment.

For more details, read the scientific opinion in the EFSA Journal.


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