Monsanto has won final approval from the US for its new genetically-modified soybeans and cotton, designed to withstand a dominant biocide that fights weed resistance built up as a result of the company’s glyphosate-based Roundup herbicide already in use, RT reports.
The
US Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) announced Thursday that the powerful biotechnology corporation’s GMO
cotton and soybean plants have been given “non-regulated” status.
Monsanto
now awaits approval from the US Environmental Protection Agency for the new
herbicide – a mix of the formidable chemical dicamba and glyphosate, which the
company has developed for use on the newly-approved GMO crops.
The
new GMO crops – coupled with the dicamba/glyphosate cocktail – make up what
Monsanto has dubbed the 'Roundup Ready Xtend crop system,' designed to trump super
weeds that have developed along with the company’s glyphosate-based Roundup
biocide.
Dicamba
was first approved in 1967 and has been linked to high rates of cancer and birth
defects in the families of food growers, according to government and other
scientific studies.
Consumer,
health, environmental, and farmer advocates have fiercely opposed the new Xtend
system, as it portends an overall “10-fold
increase in dicamba use in American agriculture, from under 4 million lbs at
present to more than 40 million lbs per year,” according to Center for
Food Safety.
“Monsanto’s genetically-engineered dicamba-resistant
crops are yet another example of how pesticide firms are taking agriculture
back to the dark days of heavy, indiscriminate use of hazardous pesticides,
seriously endangering human health and the environment,” said Andrew Kimbrell,
executive director of Center for Food Safety, in a statement.
“If EPA also reneges on its responsibility to
protect human and environmental health, Center for Food Safety will pursue all
available legal options to halt the introduction of these dangerous crops.”
The
USDA and Monsanto have said that Xtend will increase dicamba use in cotton by
14 times current levels, according to Reuters, and, in soybeans, 500 times
current levels, the Pesticide Action Network said in a statement.
"I am convinced that in all of my years
serving the agriculture industry, the widespread use of dicamba herbicide
[poses] the single most serious threat to the future of the specialty crop
industry in the Midwest,” said Steve Smith, Director of Agriculture for Red Gold, a
tomato-processing company.
Opposition
- and even the USDA - says more dicamba will only mean additional weed
resistance in the future, translating to more profits for the likes of Monsanto
and Dow Chemical, which received US approval for its genetically-engineered 2,4-D-resistant
corn and soybeans in September 2014.
"The pesticide treadmill spins on, and that's
great news for Monsanto," said Gary Ruskin, executive director of US Right to Know, a consumer
advocacy group, Reuters reported.
"This is just the latest in a endless string
of favors from our federal government to Monsanto."
Crops
most at risk from increased dicamba exposure include fruits, nuts, and
vegetables, growers of which say they fear the chemical will drift onto and
damage their fields.
Monsanto,
according to Reuters, said it will educate food growers over the proper way to
avoid dicamba drift. But biocide opponents are skeptical of these promises and
say the burden will rest with the growers -- not Monsanto.
“Monsanto’s response to farmers’ concerns about
crop damage has been to develop exceedingly complex and demanding protocols for
applying and disposing of the herbicide cocktail, including a ten-step triple
rinse of sprayers that is likely to take more than an hour and then entails
proper disposal of the contaminated rinse water,” said the Pesticide Action Network.
“This ‘solution’ puts all responsibility on
farmers, and sets up the company to escape liability for crop damage.”
Biocide
drift will also adversely impact flowering plants and their pollinators and
other species, which depend on them for nectar and habitat.
Meanwhile,
Monsanto is awaiting approval from China to allow imports of its new soybeans.
China has been reticent about approving more GMO crops, as exemplified in
farmer lawsuits aimed at American agribusiness companies following the nation’s
rejection of US genetically-engineered-corn imports.
Monsanto
Chief Technology Officer Robb Fraley said last week that Chinese approval is
expected in time for Xtend’s commercial launch in 2016.
Read the article HERE.
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