The EU announced plans Wednesday to allow member states to individually decide whether to allow the import of controversial genetically modified foods and animal feed, drawing a sharp US response.

The move mirrors an earlier compromise approved by the European Parliament in January which gave the 28 EU countries the right to decide whether or not to cultivate Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs).

"Once adopted, today's proposal will … grant Member States a greater say as regards the use of EU- authorised GMOs in food and feed on their respective territories," Health Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis said in a statement.

After years of bitter dispute, the EU opt-out provision means that member states opposed to GMOs will now be able to cite grounds outside health and safety, such as social or environmental impact, for banning them.

In theory as well, countries such as Spain which already grow GMOs and want more will no longer be stymied by opponents such as France.

"We are very disappointed by today's announcement of a regulatory proposal that appears hard to reconcile with the EU's international obligations," said Michael Froman, the U.S. Trade Representative.

It also helps resolve a delicate political problem for the European Commission since under current rules if a GMO is judged safe for human consumption by the European Food Safety Agency, then it has no option but to agree that it can be grown or imported without restriction in the EU.

The compromise was initially welcomed as breaking up the GMO logjam but environmental groups say that in practice it lets GMOs into the EU via the back door at the behest of giant US agri-food companies just as the bloc is negotiating a massive free trade accord with Washington.

But on the other side, the US and industry groups say the accord breaches the EU's cardinal rule that the bloc constitutes a single market where products are supposed to circulate freely.

Copa-Cogeca, the top farm lobby, said: "It will seriously threaten the internal market for food and feed products, causing substantial job losses and lower investment in the agri-food chain in opt-out countries. This would cause serious distortions of competition for all EU agri-food chain partners".

Only one GMO is currently allowed to be cultivated in the EU – US multinational Monsanto's brand of corn GMO MON810 that is grown in Spain, Portugal and the Czech Republic.

Some 58 GMO products have been cleared for import into the EU, mainly for cattle feed.

The import accord now goes to the European Parliament for further discussion before it is submitted to member states for final approval.

US 'disappointed' by EU opt-out plan for GMO imports

Washington – The United States expressed concern Wednesday about the European Union's plan to allow individual member countries to decide whether to allow imports of controversial genetically modified foods and animal feed.

The EU announcement earlier in the day came as US and EU negotiators were holding the ninth round of talks in New York this week aimed at creating the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, the world's largest free-trade zone.

US Trade Representative Michael Froman said that the European Commission's proposal to amend legislation in the genetically engineered food and feed approval process would allow the 28 EU countries "to ignore science-based safety and environmental determinations made by the European Union and 'opt out' of imports of GE food and feed."

"We are very disappointed by today's announcement of a regulatory proposal that appears hard to reconcile with the EU's international obligations," Froman said in a statement.

Dividing the EU into 28 separate markets for the circulation of certain products "seems at odds with the EU's goal of deepening the internal market," the top US trade negotiator said.

"At a time when the US and the EU are working to create further opportunities for growth and jobs through the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, proposing this kind of trade restrictive action is not constructive."

Froman pointed to a 2006 World Trade Organization decision that found that EU member-state bans on import and cultivation of genetically engineered products violated WTO rules, because the safeguards were not based on risk assessments.

Under Tuesday's proposal, EU member states opposed to genetically modified foods will now be able to cite grounds outside health and safety, such as social or environmental impact, for banning them without embroiling the Commission, the EU's executive arm, in a political stand-off that delays the approval process.

The European Parliament will review the proposal before it is submitted to member states for final approval.