USDA: No plans to regulate gene-edited plants |
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Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue today
issued a statement making it clear that USDA does not regulate, or have any
plans to regulate, plants produced through new breeding tools such as genome
editing, as long as they are not plant pests or developed using plant pests. ·
Deletions—the change to the plant is solely a genetic deletion of
any size. ·
Single base pair substitutions—the change to the plant is a single base pair
substitution. ·
Insertions from compatible plant relatives—the change to the plant solely introduces nucleic acid
sequences from a compatible relative that could otherwise cross with the
recipient organism and produce viable progeny through traditional breeding. ·
Complete Null Segregants—off-spring of a genetically engineered plant that does
not retain the change of its parent. USDA is one of three federal agencies that regulate products of food and agricultural technology. Along with the EPA and the Food and Drug Administration, the agencies work under a Coordinated Framework for the Regulation of Biotechnology designed to make sure these products are safe for the environment and human health. USDA’s regulations focus on protecting plant health; FDA oversees food and feed safety; and EPA regulates the sale, distribution, and testing of pesticides. USDA says it will continue to coordinate closely with its EPA and FDA partners to fulfill oversight responsibilities and provide the appropriate regulatory environment. “This ensures the safety of products derived from new technologies, while fostering innovation at the same time,” it said. The Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) commended USDA for the clarification. “Regulatory clarity and predictability is essential for all product developers, but is especially important for small company and public-sector plant breeders that are using gene editing tools to improve crop plants,” Karen Batra, BIO’s managing director for agriculture & environment communications, said in an email. “USDA’s clarification of its regulatory oversight of gene-edited plant products will facilitate the sort of agricultural innovation that was highlighted in the President’s Task Force on Agriculture and Rural Prosperity,” she said. The National Grain and Feed Association said the NGFA was referring to “Time is of the essence, and we have every reason to believe USDA will do its part within a coordinated and robust Gordon also called on plant breeders and the seed industry to be “forthcoming with accurate and timely information about the specific innovative plant breeding techniques being developed for commercial use in food and feed crops – through a proactive, comprehensive advance notification and ongoing consultation process – to enable the grain and food industries to respond to commercial demand and inquiries from domestic and international customers and consumers.” |
