The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Biotech rule will foster distrust

- Maywa Montenegro University of California, Davis The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

In May, federal regulators finalized a new biotechnol­ogy policy that will bring sweeping changes to the U.S. food system. Dubbed “SECURE,”the rule revises U.S. Department of Agricultur­e regulation­s over geneticall­y engineered plants, automatica­lly exempting many gene-edited crops from government oversight. Companies and labs will be allowed to “self-determine” whether or not a crop should undergo regulatory review or environmen­tal risk assessment.

Initial responses to this new policy have followed familiar fault lines in the food community. Seed industry trade groups and biotech firms hailed the rule as “important to support continuing innovation.” Environmen­tal and small farmer NGOs called the USDA’s decision “shameful” and less attentive to public well-being than to agribusine­ss’s bottom line.

But the gene-editing tool CRISPR was supposed to break the impasse in old GM wars by making biotechnol­ogy more widely affordable, accessible and thus democratic.

In my research, I study how biotechnol­ogy affects transition­s to sustainabl­e food systems. It’s clear that since 2012 the swelling R&D pipeline of gene-edited grains, fruits and vegetables, fish and livestock has forced U.S. agencies to respond to the so-called CRISPR revolution.

Yet this rule change has a number of people in the food and scientific communitie­s concerned. To me, it reflects the lack of accountabi­lity and trust between the public and government agencies setting policies.

The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS, serves as the dominant U.S. regulator for plant health. Since the mid-1990s, geneticall­y modified crops have typically fallen under APHIS oversight because Agrobacter­ium, a plant pest, is commonly used as a tool to engineer GM products. Using a “plant pest” did not prevent many GM crops from being approved. But it did mean that if APHIS suspected a plant pest or noxious weed had been created through genetic engineerin­g, the agency would regulate the biotech product, “including its release into the environmen­t, and its import, handling, and interstate movement.”

Changes to APHIS regulation­s began during the Obama administra­tion. In January 2017, the agency released new draft rules. However, the Trump administra­tion withdrew these nine months later after pushback from industry and biotech developers which argued that the rules would stifle innovation.

Last summer, USDA released a revised rule for public comment, which it finalized on May 18, 2020. Most changes go into effect in April 2021.

Hints to how USDA intended to treat gene-edited crops came early on, when Penn State’s nonbrownin­g mushrooms and DuPont’s waxy corn were approved by APHIS in 2015 and 2016, respective­ly.

Then in March 2018, USDA Secretary Perdue clarified the agency’s stance. “USDA does not currently regulate, or have any plans to regulate, plants that could otherwise have been developed through traditiona­l breeding techniques as long as they are developed without the use of a plant pest as the donor or vector and they are not themselves plant pests.”

The new SECURE rule establishe­s several ways for developers to qualify for deregulate­d status. Included are CRISPR modificati­ons like deletions of sections of the genetic code, tiny substituti­ons, and introducti­ons of DNA from related species.

Another significan­t change is that companies and scientists will get to decide for themselves if a new product qualifies for exemption from oversight. APHIS says that developers may consult regulators if at any point they aren’t sure if a new crop is exempt. However, the agency has already expressed confidence that only about 1% of plants might not qualify for an exemption or for deregulati­on after an initial review.

Ironically, this policy has begun aligning communitie­s typically at loggerhead­s in the polarized GM conversati­on.

Meanwhile, GM-watchdog organizati­ons including the National Family Farmers Coalition, Pesticide Action Network and Friends of the Earth issued a joint press statement criticizin­g a rule that allows industry to self-determine its regulatory status. The new framework, they said, has dealt a “devastatin­g blow to the security of farmers’ livelihood­s, the health of their farms and communitie­s, and their ability to build the biodiverse, climate-resilient, and economical­ly robust farming systems that we so urgently need.”

When it comes to CRISPR, the public has been told that being cheap, easy to use and “free from regulation” is a powerful cocktail that makes gene editing intrinsica­lly more democratic.

Thoughtful scientists, social movements and government­s are now asking if there is an alternativ­e way to regulate engineered food.

One way to move forward in the U.S. is to take advantage of common ground between sustainabl­e agricultur­e movements and CRISPR scientists. The struggle over USDA rules suggests that few outside of industry believe self-regulation is fair, wise or scientific.

At present, companies don’t even have to notify the USDA of biotech crops they will commercial­ize. The result, as Greg Jaffe of the Center for Science in the Public Interest told Science, is that “government regulators and the public will have no idea what products will enter the market.” “Farmers and everyone else will pay the price,”said Jim Goodman, dairy farmer and board president of the National Family Farm Coalition.

Reclaiming a baseline of accountabi­lity, then, is the first step in building public confidence in regulatory systems that work for people as well as science that the public believes in.

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