St. Louis, Missouri
April 23, 2004
As growers throughout the Corn
Belt work through spring planting season, the
National Corn Growers Association
(NCGA) encourages all farmers planting Bt corn borer resistant
corn to implement insect resistant management (IRM) refuges to
ensure they meet the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) IRM
requirements. Growers w ho do not plant proper refuges along
with their Bt corn risk losing access to this technology in the
future.
For the first time, there may be
growers who will be denied access to the Bt technology for the
2005 growing season if they do not meet the refuge
requirements again in 2004. Under the Compliance Assurance
Program (CAP) -- an EPA-approved IRM awareness and compliance
program implemented in 2002 -- growers who have been found not
meeting IRM refuge requirements in two consecutive years, can be
denied acess to Bt corn borer resistant corn in the third year.
As a CAP requirement, registrants of Bt corn borer resistant
corn are responsible for evaluating the extent to which growers
are adhering to IRM requirements through on-farm visits and an
annual grower compliance survey.
Importance of IRM
Established in 1999, IRM refuge requirements were enacted to
help prevent corn insect pests, such as the European corn borer,
from developing resistance to Bt technology, enabling the
technology to be used well into the future. According to these
requirements, growers are obligated to plant at least a 20
percent refuge, with Bt corn fields located within one-half mile
(preferably one-quarter mile) of the refuge. In certain
corn/cotton areas of the South, growers are required to plant at
least a 50 percent corn refuge.
"Research confirms that farmers growing the majority of Bt corn
acres value the technology and are adhering to IRM
requirements," said Helen Inman, NCGA Biotech Working Group
chairman. "As efforts to elevate the importance of IRM and
implementation of IRM practices continue to increase, so does
grower compliance. Every effort is being made to provide
growers with the right information so they can make
informed-decisions that result in added value to their business
-- economic and environmental. We do not want any grower to be
deprived of this valuable technology."
According to the 2003 IRM grower
compliance survey, 92 percent of farmers met regulatory
requirements for IRM refuge size, while 93 percent met refuge
distance requirements -- an increase from 87 and 82 percent
reported respectively in 2000 when the survey began.
NCGA Online Learning Center for IRM
To help support IRM awareness efforts, NCGA recently launched
the industry's first IRM online education center for growers --
the Insect Resistance Management Learning Center (IRMLC).
Developed by NCGA and the Agricultural Biotechnology Stewardship
Committee (ABSTC) -- a coalition of the four Bt corn borer
registrants -- the IRMLC provides a comprehensive overview on
the principles of IRM.
Available free-of-charge at
http://www.ncga.com, the IRMLC provides corn growers access
to training on several topics, including IRM, Compliance
AssuranceProgram (CAP), Integrated Pest Management (IPM), Corn
Borer, and Corn Rootworm. Within each section, users of the
IRMLC can complete a series of questions to reinforce their
knowledge. Upon satisfactory completion, the user can print out
a certificate of completion.
The NCGA also suggests growers consult with their seed dealers
and seed company representatives to help ensure they understand
IRM requirements. Growers also can visit the "Know Before You
Grow" section of http://www.ncga.com for more information on Bt
corn and the IRM requirements.
The Agricultural Biotechnology Stewardship Technical Committee
(ABSTC) includes Bt corn registrants Dow AgroSciences; Monsanto
Company; Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., A DuPont Company;
and Syngenta Seeds, Inc. The committee is working with the EPA
to enforce IRM compliance. The National Corn Growers
Association (NCGA) and the Biotechnology Industry Organization
(BIO), along with various seed companies and universities, all
support the Committee's IRM compliance efforts. For additional
information on biotechnology, go to
http://www.ncga.com.
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