St. Louis, Missouri
March 27, 2007The 2007
corn planting season is under way, and the
National Corn Growers Association
(NCGA) advises growers that
Syngenta’s Agrisure™ Rootworm trait (MIR 604) has not
received full approval in Japan. NCGA’s biotechnology policy
only supports events that have received full regulatory approval
in the United States and Japan.
“We have requested Syngenta not
release hybrids containing this trait this planting season,”
said NCGA President Ken McCauley. “Growers planting the
Agrisure™ Rootworm trait should be aware that if Japanese
regulatory approvals are not granted by harvest, there will be
serious restrictions on the marketability of the grain.”
NCGA’s request that Syngenta
withhold the release of the Agrisure™ Rootworm trait was solely
based on the current lack of full Japanese approvals. Japan is
the leading U.S. corn export market and accounts for nearly 5
percent of total U.S. production.
“Our request is consistent with
our policy, which addresses customer concerns and protects our
traditional markets,” said NCGA President Ken McCauley. “NCGA
supports commercial release of biotech corn events or
combination of events that have received full approval by U.S.
and Japanese regulatory agencies.”
NCGA’s biotech position I-A-1
#4 reads:
“Support the commercial release of biotech corn events or
combination of events subsequent to consultation with and
approval by the NCGA Biotech Working Group. These events must
also receive full approval by the relevant U.S. and Japanese
regulatory agencies, and the product registrant must be
aggressively pursuing approval in every country or bloc that
requires approval prior to importation of corn, corn products or
food containing corn ingredients.”
NCGA strongly encourages
farmers planting the trait to develop alternative marketing
plans for this grain. It will not be marketed under the Market
Choices™ label. If Japanese regulatory approvals are not
received prior to harvest, this grain must be kept out of export
channels and away from processors that might export corn
products such as corn gluten feed and distillers dried grains.
Although the primary concern is
Japan, Agrisure Rootworm currently lacks regulatory approval in
most major export markets, McCauley said.
Agrisure Rootworm and stacks
will be carried by NK Brand, Garst and Golden Harvest hybrids.
Click here for NCGA’s complete position on biotech hybrids. |