Houston Chronicle

Trump order makes it easier for GMO crops to get federal approval

- By Mike Dorning and Jennifer A. Dlouhy BLOOMBERG NEWS

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing federal agencies to ease rules for approving geneticall­y modified crops and other agricultur­al biotechnol­ogy.

The order instructs the U.S. Agricultur­e Department, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency — all of which have jurisdicti­on over geneticall­y engineered agricultur­al products — to review their biotechnol­ogy regulation­s to streamline approval processes, a White House fact sheet states.

Trump signed the order Tuesday during a stop at an ethanol plant in politicall­y important Iowa.

The order is intended to speed approval of new agricultur­al biotechnol­ogy, reduce developers’ costs and encourage more investment in GMO crops, the White House said in a fact sheet.

The move was cheered by industry representa­tives, who said prudent regulation­s can help foster biology-driven innovation­s that can improve nutrition, reduce food waste and bolster crop yields.

Jim Greenwood, president of the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on, said the group “applauds the Trump administra­tion for taking this important step forward to ensure government policy does not hinder 21st-century biotechnol­ogy from addressing the many global challenges — from a looming food crisis to climate — that are facing society today.”

The Agricultur­e Department last week proposed a broad overhaul of biotech rules that would exempt from regulation geneticall­y edited farm products with traits “similar in kind” to modificati­ons that could be produced through traditiona­l breeding techniques.

Wheat plants geneticall­y engineered to resist the Monsanto herbicide Roundup recently were detected in an unplanted field in Washington state, although there’s no evidence the grain has entered the food supply, the Agricultur­e Department announced on Friday.

The USDA didn’t say when or more precisely where the wheat was discovered. Geneticall­y modified wheat hasn’t been approved for sale in the U.S.

Asian and European buyers have in the past halted purchases from entire regions when modified strains of unapproved wheat were discovered.

 ?? Mandel Ngan / Getty Images ?? President Donald Trump holds up an executive order to streamline the approval process for GMO crops, as Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue applauds.
Mandel Ngan / Getty Images President Donald Trump holds up an executive order to streamline the approval process for GMO crops, as Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue applauds.

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