National Organic Program-Submission of Petitions of Substances for Inclusion on or Removal From the National List of Substances Allowed and Prohibited in Organic Production and Handling, 2167-2170 [E7-596]
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2167
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 72, No. 11
Thursday, January 18, 2007
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 205
[Docket No. AMS–TM–06–0223; TM–06–12]
National Organic Program—
Submission of Petitions of Substances
for Inclusion on or Removal From the
National List of Substances Allowed
and Prohibited in Organic Production
and Handling
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Guidelines on
Procedures for Submitting National List
Petitions.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice supersedes prior
Department of Agriculture’s (USDA)
National Organic Program’s (NOP)
published guidelines used to submit
petitions to amend the National List of
Allowed and Prohibited Substances
(National List). The National List
identifies the synthetic substances that
may be used and the non-synthetic
substances that may not be used in
organic production. The National List
also identifies synthetic and nonsynthetic substances that may be used
in organic handling. This notice
provides guidance on who may submit
petitions, what substances may be
petitioned and the information that is
required to be included within a
submitted petition. Additionally, this
notice establishes new commercial
availability evaluation criteria that will
be applied during the petition review of
non-organic agricultural substances for
inclusion onto or removal from
§ 205.606 of the National List.
DATES: Effective Date: These guidelines
will be in effect on January 19, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Petitions should be
submitted in duplicate to: Program
Manager, USDA/AMS/TM/NOP, Room
4008-So., Ag Stop 0268, 1400
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Independence Ave., SW., Washington,
DC 20250. Phone: (202) 720–3252. Fax:
(202) 205–7808. To submit petitions
electronically, contact the USDA NOP
for additional instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
National List Coordinator, National
Organic Program, USDA/AMS/TM/
NOP, Room 4008–So., Ag Stop 0268,
1400 Independence Ave., SW.,
Washington, DC 20250. Phone: (202)
720–3252. Fax: (202) 720–3252.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Organic Foods Production Act of
1990 (OFPA), as amended (7 U.S.C.
6501 et seq.), authorizes the
establishment of the NOP regulations
including the National List of Allowed
and Prohibited Substances (National
List). This National List identifies the
synthetic substances that may be used
and the non-synthetic substances that
may not be used in organic production,
and also identifies synthetic and nonsynthetic substances that may be used
in organic handling. The OFPA and
NOP regulations, in § 205.105,
specifically prohibit the use of any
synthetic substance for organic
production and handling unless the
synthetic substance is on the National
List. Section 205.105 also requires that
any non-organic, non-synthetic
substance used in organic handling
must also be on the National List. Since
the NOP regulations became effective on
October 21, 2002, the National List can
only be amended through rulemaking by
either the National List Petition Process
or the National List Sunset Process. The
guidelines contained in this notice
apply only to the National List Petition
Process.
The ability for any person to petition
to amend the National List is authorized
by the OFPA (7 U.S.C. 6518(n)) and the
NOP regulations, in § 205.607. This
authorization provides that any person
may petition the National Organic
Standards Board (NOSB) for the purpose
of having a substance evaluated by the
NOSB for recommendation to the
Secretary for inclusion on or removal
from the National List. The NOSB is
authorized to review petitions under
specified evaluation criteria in OFPA (7
U.S.C 6518(m)), and forward
recommendations for amending the
National List to the Secretary. Since the
NOP regulations became effective in
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October 2002, several petitions to
include synthetic or non-synthetic
substances in their respective sections
of the National List have been reviewed
by the NOSB. However, only a few of
these petitions were for inclusion of
non-organic agricultural substances onto
the National List in § 205.606.
Until recently, some producers,
handlers and certifiers may have
misinterpreted § 205.606 to mean that
any non-organic agricultural product
which was determined by an accredited
certifying agent to be not commercially
available in organic form could be used
in organic products, without being
individually listed pursuant to the
National List procedures. In January
2005, the First Circuit decision in
Harvey v. Johanns held that such an
interpretation is contrary to the plain
meaning of the OFPA and ordered that
7 CFR 205.606 shall not be interpreted
to create a blanket exemption to the
National List requirements specified in
§§ 6517 and 6518 of the OFPA (7 U.S.C.
6517–6518). Consistent with the district
court’s final judgment and order, dated
June 9, 2005, on July 1, 2005, the NOP
published a notice regarding § 205.606
(70 FR 38090), and on June 7, 2006,
published a final rule revising § 205.606
to clarify that the section shall be
interpreted to permit the use of a nonorganically produced agricultural
product only when the product has been
listed in § 205.606 pursuant to National
List procedures, and when an accredited
certifying agent has determined that the
organic form of the agricultural product
is not commercially available (71 FR
32803). As a result, industry
information provided to the NOP
indicates that there may be many nonorganic agricultural substances that are
being used in organic products which
will render currently certified products
in non-compliance when the court final
order and judgment on Harvey v.
Johanns becomes fully effective on June
9, 2007.
This Federal Register Notice,
developed in collaboration with the
NOSB and based on its October 2006
recommendation, modifies the
information to be included in a petition
to provide for the review of non-organic
agricultural substances to be included
onto § 205.606. This notice also clarifies
the information to be submitted for all
types of petitions submitted to amend
the National List.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 11 / Thursday, January 18, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Procedures for Submitting National List
Petitions
Any person may submit a petition
requesting a substance to be reviewed
by the NOP and NOSB at any time. Each
substance to be evaluated for the
National List must be submitted in a
separate petition. Only single
substances may be petitioned for
evaluation; formulated products cannot
appear on the National List. When
submitting petitions, an official petition
contact should be designated for all
correspondence and the petition should
provide specific contact information
including name, address, phone
number, fax number and e-mail address.
To facilitate timely NOP review and
NOSB consideration of petitions,
petitioners must provide concise yet
comprehensive responses to the
required petition information items
described under the guideline heading
‘‘Information to be included in a
Petition.’’ Upon receipt, the NOP will
review the petition for completeness of
the required petition information. If the
required petition information is
incomplete, the petition will be
returned to the petitioner with a request
for additional information.
Petitions for substance evaluations to
add a substance onto, remove a
substance from, or amend a substance
presently on the National List involves
a public and open process. Petition
information not categorized and
accepted by USDA, pursuant to 7 CFR
1.27(d), as Confidential Business
Information (CBI) will be considered
available to the public for inspection.
Published information usually cannot
be claimed as confidential. When a
petition is considered complete and
forwarded for NOSB evaluation, except
for CBI, the petition will be made
available for public inspection.
Substance petitions that are complete
and under evaluation by the NOSB will
be posted on the NOP Web site at:
https://www.ams.usda.gov/nop. Public
comments may be submitted to either
the NOSB or the NOP for any petitioned
substance being evaluated by the NOSB.
Comments also will be posted on the
NOP Web site.
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Overview of Petition Review by the
NOSB
For each completed petition, the
responsible NOSB committee reviews
petition information, technical reports
and public comments, then develops the
recommendation for full NOSB
consideration at a scheduled public
meeting. The NOSB determines when
petitions will be reviewed at their
public meetings and when
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16:35 Jan 17, 2007
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recommendations are forwarded to the
Secretary.
As provided for in OFPA (7 U.S.C
6518(m)), when evaluating petitioned
substances for amendment of the
National List, the NOSB shall consider:
(1) The potential of such substances
for detrimental chemical interactions
with other materials used in organic
farming systems;
(2) The toxicity and mode of action of
the substance and of its breakdown
products or any contaminants, and their
persistence and areas of concentration
in the environment;
(3) The probability of environmental
contamination during manufacture, use,
misuse or disposal of such substance;
(4) The effect of the substance on
human health;
(5) The effects of the substance on
biological and chemical interactions in
the agroecosystem, including the
physiological effects of the substance on
soil organisms (including the salt index
and solubility of the soil), crops and
livestock;
(6) The alternatives to using the
substance in terms of practices or other
available materials; and
(7) Its compatibility with a system of
sustainable agriculture.
If an agricultural substance is
petitioned for amendment onto
§ 205.606 of the National List, the NOSB
shall verify that the material is
agricultural. Once the substance is
verified to be agricultural, the NOSB
will determine if the substance is
potentially commercially unavailable.
The NOSB will consider:
(A) Why the substance should be
permitted in the production or handling
of an organic product;
(B) The current industry information
regarding availability of and history of
unavailability of an organic form in the
appropriate form, quality, or quantity of
the substance. Industry information
includes, but is not limited to the
following: (1) Regions of production,
including factors such as climate and
number of regions; (2) Number of
suppliers and amount produced; (3)
Current and historical supplies related
to weather events such as hurricanes,
floods, and droughts that may
temporarily halt production or destroy
crops or supplies; (4) Trade related
issues such as evidence of hoarding,
war, trade barriers, or civil unrest that
may temporarily restrict supplies, and
(5) Other issues which may present a
challenge to a consistent supply.
After considering the petition at a
scheduled public meeting, the NOSB
will forward its recommendation to the
Secretary. Upon receipt, the Secretary
will evaluate the recommendation for
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inclusion onto or removal from the
National List. Proposed amendments to
the National List are published in the
Federal Register as a Proposed Rule.
After considering and responding to
public comments on the proposed rule,
amendments to the National List are
effective only after publication in the
Federal Register as a Final Rule. A
substance that has been petitioned and
recommended to be allowed for use by
the NOSB is not allowed for use in
organic production or handling until the
final rule for amending the National
List, if any, is effective.
When a substance is added onto the
National List, it will remain on the List
for 5 years after final rule becomes
effective. As required by the Sunset
provision in OFPA (7 U.S.C 6517(e)),
the NOSB must review substances
added to the National List at least once
every 5 years per the National List
Sunset Process, to reaffirm or not
reaffirm, the status of each substance on
the National List. Petitions to reevaluate
prior NOSB recommendations to
include a substance onto or remove a
substance from the National List will be
considered by the NOSB when
substantial new petition substance
information is provided.
Submitting Petitions for § 205.606
When submitting petitions to include
a non-organic agricultural substance
onto § 205.606, the petitioner must state
in the petition justification statement,
why the substance should be permitted
in the production or handling of an
organic product. Specifically, the
petition must include current industry
information on availability of, and
history of unavailability of an organic
form of the substance. When providing
information on commercial availability
of the organic form of an agricultural
product, petitioners must be aware that
the global market is the universe of
supply; commercial availability is not
dependent upon geographic location or
local market conditions.
For petitions to remove a non-organic
agricultural substance from § 205.606,
the petitioner must state why the
substance should be prohibited from use
in a non-organic form. Any information
acquired since the original petition to
add the substance to the National List
should be provided.
Information To Be Included in a
Petition
The guidelines for required
information to be included in a petition
are as follows:
Item A—Please indicate which
section or sections the petitioned
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 11 / Thursday, January 18, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
substance will be included on and/or
removed from the National List.
• Synthetic substances allowed for
use in organic crop production,
§ 205.601.
• Non-synthetic substances
prohibited for use in organic crop
production, § 205.602.
• Synthetic substances allowed for
use in organic livestock production,
§ 205.603.
• Non-synthetic substances
prohibited for use in organic livestock
production, § 205.604.
• Non-agricultural (non-organic)
substances allowed in or on processed
products labeled as ‘‘organic’’ or ‘‘made
with organic (specified ingredients),’’
§ 205.605.
• Non-organic agricultural substances
allowed in or on processed products
labeled as ‘‘organic,’’ § 205.606.
Item B—Please provide concise and
comprehensive responses in providing
all of the following information items on
the substance being petitioned:
1. The substance’s chemical or
material common name.
2. The manufacturer’s or producer’s
name, address and telephone number
and other contact information of the
manufacturer/producer of the substance
listed in the petition.
3. The intended or current use of the
substance such as use as a pesticide,
animal feed additive, processing aid,
nonagricultural ingredient, sanitizer or
disinfectant. If the substance is an
agricultural ingredient, the petition
must provide a list of the types of
product(s) (e.g., cereals, salad dressings)
for which the substance will be used
and a description of the substance’s
function in the product(s) (e.g.,
ingredient, flavoring agent, emulsifier,
processing aid).
4. A list of the crop, livestock or
handling activities for which the
substance will be used. If used for crops
or livestock, the substance’s rate and
method of application must be
described. If used for handling
(including processing), the substance’s
mode of action must be described.
5. The source of the substance and a
detailed description of its
manufacturing or processing procedures
from the basic component(s) to the final
product. Petitioners with concerns for
confidential business information may
follow the guidelines in the Instructions
for Submitting CBI listed in #13.
6. A summary of any available
previous reviews by State or private
certification programs or other
organizations of the petitioned
substance. If this information is not
available, the petitioner should state so
in the petition.
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7. Information regarding EPA, FDA,
and State regulatory authority
registrations, including registration
numbers. If this information does not
exist, the petitioner should state so in
the petition.
8. The Chemical Abstract Service
(CAS) number or other product numbers
of the substance and labels of products
that contains the petitioned substance. If
the substance does not have an assigned
product number, the petitioner should
state so in the petition.
9. The substance’s physical properties
and chemical mode of action including
(a) Chemical interactions with other
substances, especially substances used
in organic production; (b) toxicity and
environmental persistence; (c)
environmental impacts from its use and/
or manufacture; (d) effects on human
health; and, (e) effects on soil
organisms, crops, or livestock.
10. Safety information about the
substance including a Material Safety
Data Sheet (MSDS) and a substance
report from the National Institute of
Environmental Health Studies. If this
information does not exist, the
petitioner should state so in the
petition.
11. Research information about the
substance which includes
comprehensive substance research
reviews and research bibliographies,
including reviews and bibliographies
which present contrasting positions to
those presented by the petitioner in
supporting the substance’s inclusion on
or removal from the National List. For
petitions to include non-organic
agricultural substances onto the
National List, this information item
should include research concerning
why the substance should be permitted
in the production or handling of an
organic product, including the
availability of organic alternatives.
Commercial availability does not
depend upon geographic location or
local market conditions. If research
information does not exist for the
petitioned substance, the petitioner
should state so in the petition.
12. A ‘‘Petition Justification
Statement’’ which provides justification
for any of the following actions
requested in the petition:
A. Inclusion of a Synthetic on the
National List, §§ 205.601, 205.603,
205.605(b)
• Explain why the synthetic
substance is necessary for the
production or handling of an organic
product.
• Describe any non-synthetic
substances, synthetic substances on the
National List or alternative cultural
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2169
methods that could be used in place of
the petitioned synthetic substance.
• Describe the beneficial effects to the
environment, human health, or farm
ecosystem from use of the synthetic
substance that support its use instead of
the use of a non-synthetic substance or
alternative cultural methods.
B. Removal of a Synthetic From the
National List, §§ 205.601, 205.603,
205.605(b)
• Explain why the synthetic
substance is no longer necessary or
appropriate for the production or
handling of an organic product.
• Describe any non-synthetic
substances, synthetic substances on the
National List or alternative cultural
methods that could be used in place of
the petitioned synthetic substance.
C. Inclusion of a Prohibition of a NonSynthetic, §§ 205.602 and 205.604
• Explain why the non-synthetic
substance should not be permitted in
the production of an organic product.
• Describe other non-synthetic
substances or synthetic substances on
the National List or alternative cultural
methods that could be used in place of
the petitioned substance.
D. Removal of a Prohibited NonSynthetic From the National List,
§§ 205.602 and 205.604
• Explain why the non-synthetic
substance should be permitted in the
production of an organic product.
• Describe the beneficial effects to the
environment, human health, or farm
ecosystem from use of the non-synthetic
substance that supports its use instead
of the use of other non-synthetic or
synthetic substances on the National
List or alternative cultural methods.
E. Inclusion of a Non-Synthetic, NonAgricultural Substance Onto the
National List, § 205.605(a)
• Explain why the substance is
necessary for use in organic handling.
• Describe non-synthetic or synthetic
substances on the National List or
alternative cultural methods that could
be used in place of the petitioned
synthetic substance.
• Describe any beneficial effects on
the environment, or human health from
the use of the substance that support its
use instead of the use of non-synthetic
or synthetic substances on the National
List or alternative cultural methods.
F. Removal of a Non-Synthetic, NonAgricultural Substance From the
National List, § 205.605(a)
• Explain why the substance is no
longer necessary for use in organic
handling.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 11 / Thursday, January 18, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
• Describe any non-synthetic or
synthetic substances on the National
List or alternative cultural methods that
could be used in place of the petitioned
substance.
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G. Inclusion of a Non-Organically
Produced Agricultural Substance Onto
the National List, § 205.606
• Provide a comparative description
on why the non-organic form of the
substance is necessary for use in organic
handling.
• Provide current and historical
industry information/research/evidence
that explains how or why the substance
cannot be obtained organically in the
appropriate form, appropriate quality,
and appropriate quantity to fulfill an
essential function in a system of organic
handling.
• Describe industry information on
substance non-availability of organic
sources including but not limited to the
following guidance regarding
commercial availability evaluation
criteria: (1) Regions of production,
including factors such as climate and
number of regions; (2) Number of
suppliers and amount produced; (3)
Current and historical supplies related
to weather events such as hurricanes,
floods, and droughts that may
temporarily halt production or destroy
crops or supplies; (4) Trade related
issues such as evidence of hoarding,
war, trade barriers, or civil unrest that
may temporarily restrict supplies, and
(5) Other issues which may present a
challenge to a consistent supply.
H. Removal of a Non-Organically
Produced Agricultural Substance From
the National List, § 205.606
• Provide a comparative description
as to why the non-organic form of the
substance is not necessary for use in
organic handling.
• Provide current and historical
industry information/research/evidence
that explains how or why the substance
can be obtained organically in the
appropriate form, appropriate quality,
and appropriate quantity to fulfill an
essential function in a system of organic
handling.
• Provide new industry information
on substance availability of organic
sources including but not limited to the
following guidance commercial
availability evaluation criteria: (1)
Region of production, including factors
such as climate and number of regions;
(2) Number of suppliers and amount
produced; (3) Current and historical
supplies related to weather events such
as hurricanes, floods, or droughts that
temporarily halt production or destroy
crops or supplies; (4) Trade related
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issues such as evidence of hoarding,
war, trade barriers, and civil unrest that
may temporarily restrict supplies and;
(5) Any other issues which may present
a challenge to a consistent supply.
13. A Confidential Business
Information Statement which describes
the specific required information
contained in the petition that is
considered to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or confidential
commercial information and the basis
for that determination. Petitioners
should limit their submission of
confidential information to that needed
to address the areas for which this
notice requests information. Final
determination regarding whether to
afford CBI treatment to submitted
petitions will be made by USDA
pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d). Instructions
for submitting CBI to the National List
Petition process are presented in the
instructions below:
(a) Financial or commercial
information the petitioner does not want
disclosed for competitive reasons may
be claimed as CBI. Applicants must
submit a written justification to support
each claim.
(b) ‘‘Trade secrets’’ (information
relating to the production process, such
as formulas, processes, quality control
tests and data, and research
methodology) may be claimed as CBI.
This information must be (1)
commercially valuable, (2) used in the
applicant’s business, and (3) maintained
in secrecy.
(c) Each page containing CBI material
must have ‘‘CBI Copy’’ marked in the
upper right corner of the page. In the
right margin, mark the CBI information
with a bracket and ‘‘CBI.’’
(d) The CBI-deleted copy should be a
facsimile of the CBI copy, except for
spaces occurring in the text where CBI
has been deleted. Be sure that the CBIdeleted copy is paginated the same as
the CBI copy (The CBI-deleted copy of
the application should be made from the
same copy of the application which
originally contained CBI). Additional
material (transitions, paraphrasing, or
generic substitutions, etc.) should not be
included in the CBI-deleted copy.
(e) Each page with CBI-deletions
should be marked ‘‘CBI-deleted’’ at the
upper right corner of the page. In the
right margin, mark the place where the
CBI material has been deleted with a
bracket and ‘‘CBI-deleted.’’
(f) If several pages are CBI-deleted, a
single page designating the numbers of
deleted pages may be substituted for
blank pages. (For example, ‘‘pages 7
through 10 have been CBI-deleted.’’)
(g) All published references that
appear in the CBI copy should be
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included in the reference list of the CBIdeleted copy. Published information
cannot be claimed as confidential.
(h) Final determination regarding
whether to afford CBI treatment to
submitted petitions will be made by
USDA pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d). If a
determination is made to deny CBI
treatment, the petitioner will be
afforded an opportunity to withdraw the
submission.
No additional collection or
recordkeeping requirements are
imposed on the public by this rule.
Accordingly, OMB clearance is not
required by § 305(h) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501,
et seq., or OMB’s implementation
regulation at 5 CFR, part 1320.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6501–6522.
Dated: January 10, 2007.
Lloyd C. Day,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. E7–596 Filed 1–17–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 980
[Docket No. FV06–980–1 FR]
Vegetables, Import Regulations; Partial
Exemption to the Minimum Grade
Requirements for Fresh Tomatoes
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule provides a partial
exemption to the minimum grade
requirements under the tomato import
regulation. The import regulation is
authorized under section 8e of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
of 1937 (Act). Section 8e requires
imported tomatoes to meet the same or
comparable grade and size requirements
as those in effect under Federal
Marketing Order No. 966 (order). The
order regulates the handling of tomatoes
grown in Florida. A separate rule to
amend the rules and regulations under
the order to exempt UglyRipeTM
(UglyRipe) tomatoes from the shape
requirements associated with the U.S.
No. 2 grade is being issued by
Department of Agriculture (USDA). This
rule provides the same partial
exemption under the import regulation
so it will conform to the regulations for
Florida tomatoes under the order.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule
becomes effective January 19, 2007.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 11 (Thursday, January 18, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 2167-2170]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-596]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 11 / Thursday, January 18, 2007 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 2167]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 205
[Docket No. AMS-TM-06-0223; TM-06-12]
National Organic Program--Submission of Petitions of Substances
for Inclusion on or Removal From the National List of Substances
Allowed and Prohibited in Organic Production and Handling
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Guidelines on Procedures for Submitting National List
Petitions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice supersedes prior Department of Agriculture's
(USDA) National Organic Program's (NOP) published guidelines used to
submit petitions to amend the National List of Allowed and Prohibited
Substances (National List). The National List identifies the synthetic
substances that may be used and the non-synthetic substances that may
not be used in organic production. The National List also identifies
synthetic and non-synthetic substances that may be used in organic
handling. This notice provides guidance on who may submit petitions,
what substances may be petitioned and the information that is required
to be included within a submitted petition. Additionally, this notice
establishes new commercial availability evaluation criteria that will
be applied during the petition review of non-organic agricultural
substances for inclusion onto or removal from Sec. 205.606 of the
National List.
DATES: Effective Date: These guidelines will be in effect on January
19, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Petitions should be submitted in duplicate to: Program
Manager, USDA/AMS/TM/NOP, Room 4008-So., Ag Stop 0268, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250. Phone: (202) 720-3252.
Fax: (202) 205-7808. To submit petitions electronically, contact the
USDA NOP for additional instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: National List Coordinator, National
Organic Program, USDA/AMS/TM/NOP, Room 4008-So., Ag Stop 0268, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250. Phone: (202) 720-3252.
Fax: (202) 720-3252.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Organic Foods Production Act of 1990 (OFPA), as amended (7
U.S.C. 6501 et seq.), authorizes the establishment of the NOP
regulations including the National List of Allowed and Prohibited
Substances (National List). This National List identifies the synthetic
substances that may be used and the non-synthetic substances that may
not be used in organic production, and also identifies synthetic and
non-synthetic substances that may be used in organic handling. The OFPA
and NOP regulations, in Sec. 205.105, specifically prohibit the use of
any synthetic substance for organic production and handling unless the
synthetic substance is on the National List. Section 205.105 also
requires that any non-organic, non-synthetic substance used in organic
handling must also be on the National List. Since the NOP regulations
became effective on October 21, 2002, the National List can only be
amended through rulemaking by either the National List Petition Process
or the National List Sunset Process. The guidelines contained in this
notice apply only to the National List Petition Process.
The ability for any person to petition to amend the National List
is authorized by the OFPA (7 U.S.C. 6518(n)) and the NOP regulations,
in Sec. 205.607. This authorization provides that any person may
petition the National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) for the purpose of
having a substance evaluated by the NOSB for recommendation to the
Secretary for inclusion on or removal from the National List. The NOSB
is authorized to review petitions under specified evaluation criteria
in OFPA (7 U.S.C 6518(m)), and forward recommendations for amending the
National List to the Secretary. Since the NOP regulations became
effective in October 2002, several petitions to include synthetic or
non-synthetic substances in their respective sections of the National
List have been reviewed by the NOSB. However, only a few of these
petitions were for inclusion of non-organic agricultural substances
onto the National List in Sec. 205.606.
Until recently, some producers, handlers and certifiers may have
misinterpreted Sec. 205.606 to mean that any non-organic agricultural
product which was determined by an accredited certifying agent to be
not commercially available in organic form could be used in organic
products, without being individually listed pursuant to the National
List procedures. In January 2005, the First Circuit decision in Harvey
v. Johanns held that such an interpretation is contrary to the plain
meaning of the OFPA and ordered that 7 CFR 205.606 shall not be
interpreted to create a blanket exemption to the National List
requirements specified in Sec. Sec. 6517 and 6518 of the OFPA (7
U.S.C. 6517-6518). Consistent with the district court's final judgment
and order, dated June 9, 2005, on July 1, 2005, the NOP published a
notice regarding Sec. 205.606 (70 FR 38090), and on June 7, 2006,
published a final rule revising Sec. 205.606 to clarify that the
section shall be interpreted to permit the use of a non-organically
produced agricultural product only when the product has been listed in
Sec. 205.606 pursuant to National List procedures, and when an
accredited certifying agent has determined that the organic form of the
agricultural product is not commercially available (71 FR 32803). As a
result, industry information provided to the NOP indicates that there
may be many non-organic agricultural substances that are being used in
organic products which will render currently certified products in non-
compliance when the court final order and judgment on Harvey v. Johanns
becomes fully effective on June 9, 2007.
This Federal Register Notice, developed in collaboration with the
NOSB and based on its October 2006 recommendation, modifies the
information to be included in a petition to provide for the review of
non-organic agricultural substances to be included onto Sec. 205.606.
This notice also clarifies the information to be submitted for all
types of petitions submitted to amend the National List.
[[Page 2168]]
Procedures for Submitting National List Petitions
Any person may submit a petition requesting a substance to be
reviewed by the NOP and NOSB at any time. Each substance to be
evaluated for the National List must be submitted in a separate
petition. Only single substances may be petitioned for evaluation;
formulated products cannot appear on the National List. When submitting
petitions, an official petition contact should be designated for all
correspondence and the petition should provide specific contact
information including name, address, phone number, fax number and e-
mail address.
To facilitate timely NOP review and NOSB consideration of
petitions, petitioners must provide concise yet comprehensive responses
to the required petition information items described under the
guideline heading ``Information to be included in a Petition.'' Upon
receipt, the NOP will review the petition for completeness of the
required petition information. If the required petition information is
incomplete, the petition will be returned to the petitioner with a
request for additional information.
Petitions for substance evaluations to add a substance onto, remove
a substance from, or amend a substance presently on the National List
involves a public and open process. Petition information not
categorized and accepted by USDA, pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d), as
Confidential Business Information (CBI) will be considered available to
the public for inspection. Published information usually cannot be
claimed as confidential. When a petition is considered complete and
forwarded for NOSB evaluation, except for CBI, the petition will be
made available for public inspection. Substance petitions that are
complete and under evaluation by the NOSB will be posted on the NOP Web
site at: https://www.ams.usda.gov/nop. Public comments may be submitted
to either the NOSB or the NOP for any petitioned substance being
evaluated by the NOSB. Comments also will be posted on the NOP Web
site.
Overview of Petition Review by the NOSB
For each completed petition, the responsible NOSB committee reviews
petition information, technical reports and public comments, then
develops the recommendation for full NOSB consideration at a scheduled
public meeting. The NOSB determines when petitions will be reviewed at
their public meetings and when recommendations are forwarded to the
Secretary.
As provided for in OFPA (7 U.S.C 6518(m)), when evaluating
petitioned substances for amendment of the National List, the NOSB
shall consider:
(1) The potential of such substances for detrimental chemical
interactions with other materials used in organic farming systems;
(2) The toxicity and mode of action of the substance and of its
breakdown products or any contaminants, and their persistence and areas
of concentration in the environment;
(3) The probability of environmental contamination during
manufacture, use, misuse or disposal of such substance;
(4) The effect of the substance on human health;
(5) The effects of the substance on biological and chemical
interactions in the agroecosystem, including the physiological effects
of the substance on soil organisms (including the salt index and
solubility of the soil), crops and livestock;
(6) The alternatives to using the substance in terms of practices
or other available materials; and
(7) Its compatibility with a system of sustainable agriculture.
If an agricultural substance is petitioned for amendment onto Sec.
205.606 of the National List, the NOSB shall verify that the material
is agricultural. Once the substance is verified to be agricultural, the
NOSB will determine if the substance is potentially commercially
unavailable. The NOSB will consider:
(A) Why the substance should be permitted in the production or
handling of an organic product;
(B) The current industry information regarding availability of and
history of unavailability of an organic form in the appropriate form,
quality, or quantity of the substance. Industry information includes,
but is not limited to the following: (1) Regions of production,
including factors such as climate and number of regions; (2) Number of
suppliers and amount produced; (3) Current and historical supplies
related to weather events such as hurricanes, floods, and droughts that
may temporarily halt production or destroy crops or supplies; (4) Trade
related issues such as evidence of hoarding, war, trade barriers, or
civil unrest that may temporarily restrict supplies, and (5) Other
issues which may present a challenge to a consistent supply.
After considering the petition at a scheduled public meeting, the
NOSB will forward its recommendation to the Secretary. Upon receipt,
the Secretary will evaluate the recommendation for inclusion onto or
removal from the National List. Proposed amendments to the National
List are published in the Federal Register as a Proposed Rule. After
considering and responding to public comments on the proposed rule,
amendments to the National List are effective only after publication in
the Federal Register as a Final Rule. A substance that has been
petitioned and recommended to be allowed for use by the NOSB is not
allowed for use in organic production or handling until the final rule
for amending the National List, if any, is effective.
When a substance is added onto the National List, it will remain on
the List for 5 years after final rule becomes effective. As required by
the Sunset provision in OFPA (7 U.S.C 6517(e)), the NOSB must review
substances added to the National List at least once every 5 years per
the National List Sunset Process, to reaffirm or not reaffirm, the
status of each substance on the National List. Petitions to reevaluate
prior NOSB recommendations to include a substance onto or remove a
substance from the National List will be considered by the NOSB when
substantial new petition substance information is provided.
Submitting Petitions for Sec. 205.606
When submitting petitions to include a non-organic agricultural
substance onto Sec. 205.606, the petitioner must state in the petition
justification statement, why the substance should be permitted in the
production or handling of an organic product. Specifically, the
petition must include current industry information on availability of,
and history of unavailability of an organic form of the substance. When
providing information on commercial availability of the organic form of
an agricultural product, petitioners must be aware that the global
market is the universe of supply; commercial availability is not
dependent upon geographic location or local market conditions.
For petitions to remove a non-organic agricultural substance from
Sec. 205.606, the petitioner must state why the substance should be
prohibited from use in a non-organic form. Any information acquired
since the original petition to add the substance to the National List
should be provided.
Information To Be Included in a Petition
The guidelines for required information to be included in a
petition are as follows:
Item A--Please indicate which section or sections the petitioned
[[Page 2169]]
substance will be included on and/or removed from the National List.
Synthetic substances allowed for use in organic crop
production, Sec. 205.601.
Non-synthetic substances prohibited for use in organic
crop production, Sec. 205.602.
Synthetic substances allowed for use in organic livestock
production, Sec. 205.603.
Non-synthetic substances prohibited for use in organic
livestock production, Sec. 205.604.
Non-agricultural (non-organic) substances allowed in or on
processed products labeled as ``organic'' or ``made with organic
(specified ingredients),'' Sec. 205.605.
Non-organic agricultural substances allowed in or on
processed products labeled as ``organic,'' Sec. 205.606.
Item B--Please provide concise and comprehensive responses in
providing all of the following information items on the substance being
petitioned:
1. The substance's chemical or material common name.
2. The manufacturer's or producer's name, address and telephone
number and other contact information of the manufacturer/producer of
the substance listed in the petition.
3. The intended or current use of the substance such as use as a
pesticide, animal feed additive, processing aid, nonagricultural
ingredient, sanitizer or disinfectant. If the substance is an
agricultural ingredient, the petition must provide a list of the types
of product(s) (e.g., cereals, salad dressings) for which the substance
will be used and a description of the substance's function in the
product(s) (e.g., ingredient, flavoring agent, emulsifier, processing
aid).
4. A list of the crop, livestock or handling activities for which
the substance will be used. If used for crops or livestock, the
substance's rate and method of application must be described. If used
for handling (including processing), the substance's mode of action
must be described.
5. The source of the substance and a detailed description of its
manufacturing or processing procedures from the basic component(s) to
the final product. Petitioners with concerns for confidential business
information may follow the guidelines in the Instructions for
Submitting CBI listed in 13.
6. A summary of any available previous reviews by State or private
certification programs or other organizations of the petitioned
substance. If this information is not available, the petitioner should
state so in the petition.
7. Information regarding EPA, FDA, and State regulatory authority
registrations, including registration numbers. If this information does
not exist, the petitioner should state so in the petition.
8. The Chemical Abstract Service (CAS) number or other product
numbers of the substance and labels of products that contains the
petitioned substance. If the substance does not have an assigned
product number, the petitioner should state so in the petition.
9. The substance's physical properties and chemical mode of action
including (a) Chemical interactions with other substances, especially
substances used in organic production; (b) toxicity and environmental
persistence; (c) environmental impacts from its use and/or manufacture;
(d) effects on human health; and, (e) effects on soil organisms, crops,
or livestock.
10. Safety information about the substance including a Material
Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) and a substance report from the National
Institute of Environmental Health Studies. If this information does not
exist, the petitioner should state so in the petition.
11. Research information about the substance which includes
comprehensive substance research reviews and research bibliographies,
including reviews and bibliographies which present contrasting
positions to those presented by the petitioner in supporting the
substance's inclusion on or removal from the National List. For
petitions to include non-organic agricultural substances onto the
National List, this information item should include research concerning
why the substance should be permitted in the production or handling of
an organic product, including the availability of organic alternatives.
Commercial availability does not depend upon geographic location or
local market conditions. If research information does not exist for the
petitioned substance, the petitioner should state so in the petition.
12. A ``Petition Justification Statement'' which provides
justification for any of the following actions requested in the
petition:
A. Inclusion of a Synthetic on the National List, Sec. Sec. 205.601,
205.603, 205.605(b)
Explain why the synthetic substance is necessary for the
production or handling of an organic product.
Describe any non-synthetic substances, synthetic
substances on the National List or alternative cultural methods that
could be used in place of the petitioned synthetic substance.
Describe the beneficial effects to the environment, human
health, or farm ecosystem from use of the synthetic substance that
support its use instead of the use of a non-synthetic substance or
alternative cultural methods.
B. Removal of a Synthetic From the National List, Sec. Sec. 205.601,
205.603, 205.605(b)
Explain why the synthetic substance is no longer necessary
or appropriate for the production or handling of an organic product.
Describe any non-synthetic substances, synthetic
substances on the National List or alternative cultural methods that
could be used in place of the petitioned synthetic substance.
C. Inclusion of a Prohibition of a Non-Synthetic, Sec. Sec. 205.602
and 205.604
Explain why the non-synthetic substance should not be
permitted in the production of an organic product.
Describe other non-synthetic substances or synthetic
substances on the National List or alternative cultural methods that
could be used in place of the petitioned substance.
D. Removal of a Prohibited Non-Synthetic From the National List,
Sec. Sec. 205.602 and 205.604
Explain why the non-synthetic substance should be
permitted in the production of an organic product.
Describe the beneficial effects to the environment, human
health, or farm ecosystem from use of the non-synthetic substance that
supports its use instead of the use of other non-synthetic or synthetic
substances on the National List or alternative cultural methods.
E. Inclusion of a Non-Synthetic, Non-Agricultural Substance Onto the
National List, Sec. 205.605(a)
Explain why the substance is necessary for use in organic
handling.
Describe non-synthetic or synthetic substances on the
National List or alternative cultural methods that could be used in
place of the petitioned synthetic substance.
Describe any beneficial effects on the environment, or
human health from the use of the substance that support its use instead
of the use of non-synthetic or synthetic substances on the National
List or alternative cultural methods.
F. Removal of a Non-Synthetic, Non-Agricultural Substance From the
National List, Sec. 205.605(a)
Explain why the substance is no longer necessary for use
in organic handling.
[[Page 2170]]
Describe any non-synthetic or synthetic substances on the
National List or alternative cultural methods that could be used in
place of the petitioned substance.
G. Inclusion of a Non-Organically Produced Agricultural Substance Onto
the National List, Sec. 205.606
Provide a comparative description on why the non-organic
form of the substance is necessary for use in organic handling.
Provide current and historical industry information/
research/evidence that explains how or why the substance cannot be
obtained organically in the appropriate form, appropriate quality, and
appropriate quantity to fulfill an essential function in a system of
organic handling.
Describe industry information on substance non-
availability of organic sources including but not limited to the
following guidance regarding commercial availability evaluation
criteria: (1) Regions of production, including factors such as climate
and number of regions; (2) Number of suppliers and amount produced; (3)
Current and historical supplies related to weather events such as
hurricanes, floods, and droughts that may temporarily halt production
or destroy crops or supplies; (4) Trade related issues such as evidence
of hoarding, war, trade barriers, or civil unrest that may temporarily
restrict supplies, and (5) Other issues which may present a challenge
to a consistent supply.
H. Removal of a Non-Organically Produced Agricultural Substance From
the National List, Sec. 205.606
Provide a comparative description as to why the non-
organic form of the substance is not necessary for use in organic
handling.
Provide current and historical industry information/
research/evidence that explains how or why the substance can be
obtained organically in the appropriate form, appropriate quality, and
appropriate quantity to fulfill an essential function in a system of
organic handling.
Provide new industry information on substance availability
of organic sources including but not limited to the following guidance
commercial availability evaluation criteria: (1) Region of production,
including factors such as climate and number of regions; (2) Number of
suppliers and amount produced; (3) Current and historical supplies
related to weather events such as hurricanes, floods, or droughts that
temporarily halt production or destroy crops or supplies; (4) Trade
related issues such as evidence of hoarding, war, trade barriers, and
civil unrest that may temporarily restrict supplies and; (5) Any other
issues which may present a challenge to a consistent supply.
13. A Confidential Business Information Statement which describes
the specific required information contained in the petition that is
considered to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or
confidential commercial information and the basis for that
determination. Petitioners should limit their submission of
confidential information to that needed to address the areas for which
this notice requests information. Final determination regarding whether
to afford CBI treatment to submitted petitions will be made by USDA
pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d). Instructions for submitting CBI to the
National List Petition process are presented in the instructions below:
(a) Financial or commercial information the petitioner does not
want disclosed for competitive reasons may be claimed as CBI.
Applicants must submit a written justification to support each claim.
(b) ``Trade secrets'' (information relating to the production
process, such as formulas, processes, quality control tests and data,
and research methodology) may be claimed as CBI. This information must
be (1) commercially valuable, (2) used in the applicant's business, and
(3) maintained in secrecy.
(c) Each page containing CBI material must have ``CBI Copy'' marked
in the upper right corner of the page. In the right margin, mark the
CBI information with a bracket and ``CBI.''
(d) The CBI-deleted copy should be a facsimile of the CBI copy,
except for spaces occurring in the text where CBI has been deleted. Be
sure that the CBI-deleted copy is paginated the same as the CBI copy
(The CBI-deleted copy of the application should be made from the same
copy of the application which originally contained CBI). Additional
material (transitions, paraphrasing, or generic substitutions, etc.)
should not be included in the CBI-deleted copy.
(e) Each page with CBI-deletions should be marked ``CBI-deleted''
at the upper right corner of the page. In the right margin, mark the
place where the CBI material has been deleted with a bracket and ``CBI-
deleted.''
(f) If several pages are CBI-deleted, a single page designating the
numbers of deleted pages may be substituted for blank pages. (For
example, ``pages 7 through 10 have been CBI-deleted.'')
(g) All published references that appear in the CBI copy should be
included in the reference list of the CBI-deleted copy. Published
information cannot be claimed as confidential.
(h) Final determination regarding whether to afford CBI treatment
to submitted petitions will be made by USDA pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d).
If a determination is made to deny CBI treatment, the petitioner will
be afforded an opportunity to withdraw the submission.
No additional collection or recordkeeping requirements are imposed
on the public by this rule.
Accordingly, OMB clearance is not required by Sec. 305(h) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq., or OMB's
implementation regulation at 5 CFR, part 1320.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6501-6522.
Dated: January 10, 2007.
Lloyd C. Day,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. E7-596 Filed 1-17-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-02-P