Known for its promotion of organic farming throughout the entire town, Aya Town (Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu), has amended its Aya Town Ordinance for the Promotion of Natural Ecological Farming by adding wording which bans the cultivation of GM crops. Based on the principle of "Striving to create a town that makes use of and develops the natural ecology" enshrined in the Town Charter, a clause stating that the town will not plant GM crops has been added to the banning of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, the pursuit of food safety, and so on.
The science and technology sub-committee of the MLHW Health Sciences Council gave new approvals to two implementation proposals for gene therapy at its meeting on 15 April 2009 (See BJ
August 2008). One was a proposal from the University of Tokyo Hospital for treatment of GBM (glioblastoma multiforme), a kind of brain tumor, and the other a proposal from the National Cancer Center for a treatment of hematopoietic malignancies such as leukemia and lymphomas. The vectors (gene carrier) used for the gene insertion will be the herpes virus and a retrovirus, respectively. The mass media has ceased reporting on gene therapy, but the numbers of approved treatments has been steadily rising, now reaching 24. Despite the failure of the effectiveness of the treatments to improve, the gene introduction technology thus cultivated is being put to use in the latest technologies such as iPS (induced pluripotent stem) cells.
A meeting of the MAFF Type 1 Usage Regulation Approval GM Crop Cultivation Experimental Guideline Panel was held on 28 April 2009 at which it was discussed whether or not amendment of the guidelines was necessary on the basis of recent research results on cross-fertilization distances and so on. Under the current guidelines buffer distances for the prevention of cross-fertilization are stipulated as 30 m for rice, 10 m for soy, and 600 m for maize (300 m in the case of an intervening shelterbelt). (See BJ
March 2009) According to trials carried out in FY2008 by an independent administrative body under the jurisdiction of MAFF, cross-fertilization was confirmed at a rate of 0.001% at a distance of 45 m for rice and at a rate of 0.057% at a distance of 750-800 m for maize. However, the panel reached the conclusion that no amendment of the cross-fertilization prevention buffer distances in the guidelines were necessary for the following two reasons: 1) Large-scale trials never result in a cross-fertilization rate of zero, and 2) Staggering the timing of cultivation is effective.