Sep. 28, 2015
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is making available for a 30-day public comment period its proposed plan to strengthen oversight of genetically engineered (GE) wheat field trials. The proposed plan calls for all future field trials of GE wheat to be done under APHIS permit, to include requirements for more stringent post-harvest monitoring for volunteer wheat plants. Volunteers are plants that grow following the harvest of a crop. Volunteers are common following field trials of regulated GE plants, but their presence must be appropriately addressed in order to prevent the establishment, and possible spread, of regulated GE plants.
APHIS is proposing to require that developers apply for a permit for field trials involving GE wheat because of two recent detections of GE wheat where the plants should not have been growing. In 2013 and 2014, APHIS responded to, and investigated, the detections of GE wheat found growing in unauthorized fields in Oregon and Montana, respectively. No varieties of GE wheat have been deregulated by APHIS. Despite an exhaustive investigation, APHIS could not determine the source of the unauthorized GE wheat in Oregon; while the investigation into the detection in Montana remains open, the unauthorized GE wheat was found at the location of a previous field trial of GE wheat conducted under APHIS’ regulatory oversight.
APHIS will consider all comments received on or before October 26, 2015.
View More