19/05/2026
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What this vote was about:
This was the European Parliament's FINAL plenary vote on a regulation governing New Genomic Techniques (NGTs) — essentially a new category of gene-edited crops made with tools like CRISPR. The core question was whether to treat these differently from traditional GMOs.
The two-tier system being voted on are for NGTs, which are split into two categories.
Category 1 plants are considered equivalent to conventionally bred varieties and exempt from GMO legislation — they will not be labelled, except for seeds and other reproductive material.
Category 2 plants have more complex modifications and remain subject to full GMO rules, including authorisation, traceability, and labelling requirements.
What Parliament originally wanted vs. what ended up in the text:
The European Parliament's position in 2024 had supported mandatory labelling, as well as a ban on patents, for NGT crops and products. However, the Parliament's rapporteur failed to uphold these key demands in the subsequent negotiations with the Council and the Commission.
The patent issue:
Before the trilogue agreement was reached, Parliament had asked for a full ban on patents to avoid giving multinational seed companies a monopoly and depriving farmers and small breeders of access to NGTs. However, this position did not survive the negotiations. What remains instead are transparency measures — a public database and a future expert group.
Protesting MEPs would need an absolute majority to challenge the regulation in the plenary session. That's a high bar.
The vote was scheduled for May 18–19 and the plenary session runs through May 21. Based on everything leading up to it, the regulation was widely expected to pass, having already cleared the Environment Committee by a strong 47–31 majority in January 2026.
Why it matters for you specifically:
Cyprus held the EU Council presidency when this file was finalized in January, and Cyprus's Minister of Agriculture Maria Panayiotou was quoted endorsing the new rules — so Cyprus was actively supportive.
If passed, the framework would apply from mid-2028 after a 24-month transition period.