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Regarding the PRM legislation, there has been no announcement since the official withdrawal of the proposal in December 2014 (see http://www.hortweek.com/plant-reproductive-material-legislation-european-commissions-withdrawals-list-2015/ornamentals/article/1326823). While this may seem as a victory, it remains worrying as the Commission might decide at any point to put it back on the table. To reply to your "liaising with other horticultural organisations " question, the UK working group (RHS, DEFRA, NFU, Plant Heritage, HDC, BGA etc) which was set up to study the proposal, try to understand its consequences, and write amendments is still very much alive, and ready to react if...Nagoya, mentioned in Michael Wickenden's piece is a completely different issue (global legislation, on access and use of genetic material).The Nagoya protocol is officially in place since October 2014, however every country has to work on its own ways of implementing it. This has to be done by October 2015, but I believe that for the UK DEFRA and Kew are still working on it. For now, nobody really knows what it entails, how or whether it will be enforced at all, by whom, etc...which is the reason why the RHS has not yet issued a statement. Even gardens are only just starting to think about it - there's a PlantNetwork meeting soon on that topic (http://plantnetwork.org/news/booking-opens-nagoya-protocol-day-kew/).For those who are interested (it's a bit dense - policy paper), here's an early report on Nagoya and how it could affect various sectors: http://randd.defra.gov.uk/Document.aspx?Document=10324_WC1016_FinalreporttoDefra.pdf