Under Industry Pressure, USDA Works to Speed Approval of Monsanto’s Genetically Engineered Crops

For years, biotech agriculture opponents have accused regulators of working too closely with big biotech firms when deregulating genetically engineered (GE) crops. Now, their worst fears could be coming true: under a new two-year pilot program at...

December 12, 2011 | Source: Truthout | by Mike Ludwig

For related articles and more information, please visit OCA’s Genetic Engineering page and our Millions Against Monsanto page.
For years, biotech agriculture opponents have accused regulators of
working too closely with big biotech firms when deregulating genetically
engineered (GE) crops. Now, their worst fears could be coming true:
under a new two-year pilot program at the USDA, regulators are training
the world’s biggest biotech firms, including Monsanto, BASF and
Syngenta, to conduct environmental reviews of their own transgenic seed
products as part of the government’s deregulation process.

This would eliminate a critical level of oversight for the production of GE crops. Regulators are also testing new cost-sharing agreements that allow biotech firms to help pay private contractors to prepare mandatory environmental statements on GE plants the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) is considering deregulating.

The USDA launched the pilot project in April and, in November, the USDA announced vague plans to “streamline” the deregulation petition process for GE organisms. A USDA spokesperson said the streamlining effort is not part of the pilot project, but both efforts appear to address a backlog of pending GE crop deregulation petitions that has angered big biotech firms seeking to rollout new products.