gmo corn
© Antara Foto / Reuters
The US Department of Agriculture will end regulation of Monsanto's genetically-modified corn that is engineered to resist the company's herbicide, the federal regulator said. Farmers will now be able to plant the corn strains without permits.

The action, announced by USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service on Wednesday, applies to Monsanto's MON87419 corn strain, which resists dicamba- and glufosinate-based herbicides.

These resistances allow farmers to grow plants that aren't destroyed by herbicides produced by the same companies that designed the genetically-modified crops themselves.

Monsanto's August 2015 petition for nonregulated status was granted by regulators despite two dozen unfavorable statements during the USDA's public comment period. One such concern was from the consumer rights nonprofit Food & Water Watch, which said that allowing such herbicide-resistant crops to proliferate could "lead to an increase in dicamba use, which will spur the evolution of dicamba‐resistant weeds and the abandonment of conservation tillage practices."

The National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, a nonprofit advocating for pro-family farm policies, also took issue with the petition. The group called for an environmental impact statement (EIS) to assess any potential damage that the nonregulated corn could cause to the environment.

"Without a coordinated and thorough evaluation of the full technology package, and a meaningful analysis of impacts, adding yet another new crop/herbicide package will continue adding to the existing harmful effects on herbicides on ecological systems, human health, and farmers' livelihoods through herbicide drift and nontarget crop losses; the widespread increase in herbicide-resistant weeds; and environmental and public health impacts," the group said in a statement.

Monsanto's bid for deregulation was motivated in part by the corporation's desire to sell dicamba as an alternative to its glyphosate herbicides, which face competition from generic weed-killers, according to Reuters.

The agrochemical giant praised the USDA's decision, saying in a comment that "the use of herbicides which provide multiple mechanisms-of-action against target weeds is an effective stewardship practice for season-long control of weeds, for delaying the selection of herbicide-resistant weeds, for managing populations of weeds that are already resistant to a particular herbicide, as well as for a long-term solution for sustainable weed management."


Comment: The only thing that these herbicides have done is create superweeds that require ever higher doses of multiple poisons which are contaminating farmland, our water and food supply.

Also deregulated was the GMO corn strain MZIR098, created by rival biotech corporation Syngenta to be resistant to insects as well as glufosinate. The corn was determined to be similar enough to Monsanto's strain that it could be granted the same nonregulated status.