Importation, Interstate Movement, and Release Into the Environment of Certain Genetically Engineered Organisms, 60008-60048 [E8-23584]
Download as PDF
60008
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
7 CFR Part 340
[Docket No. APHIS–2008–0023]
RIN 0579–AC31
Importation, Interstate Movement, and
Release Into the Environment of
Certain Genetically Engineered
Organisms
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of public
forums.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We propose to revise our
regulations regarding the importation,
interstate movement, and environmental
release of certain genetically engineered
organisms in order to bring the
regulations into alignment with
provisions of the Plant Protection Act.
The revisions would also update the
regulations in response to advances in
genetic science and technology and our
accumulated experience in
implementing the current regulations.
This is the first comprehensive review
and revision of the regulations since
they were established in 1987. This rule
would affect persons involved in the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of
genetically engineered plants and
certain other genetically engineered
organisms.
DATES: We will consider all comments
that we receive on or before November
24, 2008. We will also consider
comments made at public forums to be
held in Davis, CA; Kansas City, MO; and
Riverdale, MD.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/fdmspublic/
component/
main?main=DocketDetail&d=APHIS2008-0023 to submit or view comments
and to view supporting and related
materials available electronically.
• Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery:
Please send two copies of your comment
to Docket No. APHIS–2008–0023,
Regulatory Analysis and Development,
PPD, APHIS, Station 3A–03.8, 4700
River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD
20737–1238. Please state that your
comment refers to Docket No. APHIS–
2008–0023.
• Public Forums. Written and oral
comment will be accepted at three
public forums held during the comment
period. See Public Forums below.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
Reading Room: You may read any
comments that we receive on this
docket in our reading room. The reading
room is located in room 1141 of the
USDA South Building, 14th Street and
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC. Normal reading room
hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except holidays. To be
sure someone is there to help you,
please call (202) 690–2817 before
coming.
Other Information: Additional
information about APHIS and its
programs is available on the Internet at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Biotechnology Regulatory Services,
APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147,
Riverdale, MD 20737–1236; (301) 734–
5710.
For information about the public
forums, contact: Dr. T. Clint Nesbitt,
BRS, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147,
Riverdale, MD 20737–1238; (301) 734–
5673.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Forums
In order to provide additional
opportunities for the public to comment
on the proposed rule, APHIS will hold
public forums in three locations: Davis,
CA; Kansas City, MO; and Riverdale,
MD (see Meeting Locations below).
These informal forums are designed to
engage interested individuals from the
public and elicit comments related to
the proposed rule. The format will
consist of informational posters and
comment stations. Attendees will be
able walk through the forum during the
open hours and interact with other
attendees and APHIS personnel. Short
welcoming remarks will be given by
APHIS personnel at 4:30 p.m. and again
at 6 p.m. (local time), but there is no set
schedule for each poster station, so the
public may come and go at any time
during the forum period. Participants
will have the opportunity, if desired, to
record brief oral comments with a court
reporter or to submit comments in
writing, following directions provided
at the comment stations. A transcript of
the oral comments and a copy of any
written comments submitted at the
public forums will be placed in the
rulemaking record and will be available
for public inspection.
The purpose of these public forums is
to allow the public a venue in which to
interact with APHIS representatives and
to allow APHIS to solicit further
information from the public. Comments
received at these public forums will be
added to this Docket.
Dates: The public forums will be held
in Davis, CA, on October 28, 2008; in
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Kansas City, MO, on October 30, 2008;
and Riverdale, MD, on November 13,
2008. Each public forum will be held
from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., local time.
Meeting Locations: The public forums
will be held at the following locations:
USDA Riverside, Oklahoma City
Memorial Conference Rooms B, C, and
D, 4700 River Road, Riverdale, MD,
20737. For directions or facilities
information, call (301) 734–8010.
Walter A. Buehler Alumni & Visitors
Center, Alpha Gamma Rho Hall,
University of California, Davis, CA,
95616. For directions or facilities
information, call (530) 754–9195 or visit
https://www.alumnicenter.ucdavis.edu/.
Hilton Kansas City Airport, Shawnee
Room A, 8801 NW 112th Street, Kansas
City, MO, 64153. For directions or
facilities information, call (816) 891–
8900 or visit https://www.hiltonkci.com/
.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. APHIS Role in Federal Regulation of
Genetically Engineered Organisms
B. Current Regulations in 7 CFR part 340
C. Plant Protection Act Authority to
Regulate Plant Pests, Noxious Weeds,
and Biological Control Organisms
III. Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Regulatory Scope (§ 340.0
Scope and General Restrictions)
1. Genetically Engineered Organisms
Subject to 7 CFR part 340
2. Deleting the List of Organisms Which
Are or Contain Plant Pests
3. Regulating Whole Organisms, Parts, and
Nonliving Products
B. Permits for Authorizing Importation,
Interstate Movement, and Release Into
the Environment of Certain GE
Organisms
1. Elimination of the Notification
Procedure
2. Revisions to Permit Procedures
3. Permit Types and Environmental
Release Categories (§ 340.2(b))
4. Permit Application Information
Requirements (§ 340.2(c))
5. Permit Conditions (§ 340.3)
6. Elimination of Courtesy Permits
C. Conditional Exemptions from Permit
Requirement (§ 340.4, § 340.5)
D. Petitions for Nonregulated Status
(§ 340.6)
E. Compliance, Enforcement, and Remedial
Action (§ 340.7)
1. Ensuring Compliance with Permits and
Exemption Activities
2. Low Level Presence of Regulated GE
Plants in Seed or Grain
F. Administrative Changes
1. Confidential Business Information
(§ 340.8)
2. Time Frames for APHIS Action on
Permit Applications and Petitions
3. Duration Period for Permits
G. Definitions and Miscellaneous Changes
IV. Required Analyses
A. National Environmental Policy Act
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
B. Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory
Flexibility Act
C. Executive Order 12372
D. Executive Order 12988
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. E-Government Act Compliance
I. Introduction
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
(USDA) Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) regulates the
safe introduction (environmental
release, interstate movement, and
importation) of certain genetically
engineered (GE) organisms under its
regulations in 7 CFR part 340. The
regulations govern the introduction of
GE organisms that might be plant pests.
APHIS has amended the regulations
several times in an effort to respond to
the need for streamlined procedures and
has established clear procedures to
remove GE organisms that do not pose
a plant pest risk from obligations under
the regulation.
The APHIS regulations have been
used most frequently for permits and
notifications for importation, interstate
movement, or environmental releases of
GE plants, although a smaller number of
permits have been issued for GE
microorganisms and insects. To date,
APHIS has authorized more than 13,000
environmental releases of GE plants,
most of which have been part of the
development of improved crop varieties
for agriculture. These controlled
environmental releases are sometimes
referred to as field tests or field trials,
in recognition of their relationship to
field tests done in the traditional
development of plant varieties, and in
this document the terms field test or
field trial should be understood to mean
environmental release. In addition to
permits and notifications, APHIS has
completed reviews in response to
petitions requesting nonregulated status
under these regulations. To date, APHIS
has granted 74 determinations of
nonregulated status, and all of these
have been for GE plants (more
information about these is posted at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/brs/
not_reg.html ). Many of these plants
have since been used to develop plant
varieties that have become part of the
options that growers have for
agricultural production in the United
States and other countries. The APHIS
determinations of nonregulated status
have been for the GE plant(s) and their
progeny. The GE plant with
nonregulated status can be used
subsequently in plant breeding
programs or in agriculture just like other
plant lines. A GE plant that has received
nonregulated status can be bred with
another GE plant with nonregulated
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
status, and the resulting progeny which
could contain multiple GE traits still
retains nonregulated status.
The bulk of APHIS-authorized
introductions have been crop plants
bearing genes which confer resistance to
certain insects or tolerance to certain
herbicides. Although the current
program has been effective in ensuring
the safe environmental release,
interstate movement, and importation of
certain genetically engineered
organisms, technological advances have
led to new uses and questions about
how the current regulations and APHIS
authorities will be used to maintain
appropriate oversight. Advances in
technology have created possibilities for
new and different traits, such as those
that would produce a compound for
pharmaceutical or industrial use. In
addition, researchers have been
producing organisms that may not fall
under the scope of our current
regulations and are also beginning to
focus more on perennial plants, such as
grasses or trees, which may be capable
of establishing and persisting outside
the site of introduction.
APHIS is proposing to revise its
regulations in order to respond to
emerging trends in biotechnology, to
address the current and future needs of
the agency, to continue to ensure a high
level of environmental protection, to
improve regulatory processes so that
they are more transparent to
stakeholders and the public, to more
efficiently use agency resources and to
eliminate unnecessary regulatory
burdens.
Given the diversity of U.S.
agriculture, the USDA Advisory
Committee on Biotechnology and 21st
Century Agriculture recently in its
March 2008 consensus report
encouraged the continuing support of
coexistence among various agricultural
production systems in U.S. agriculture.
APHIS concludes that the changes it is
proposing will continue to support
coexistence in U.S. agriculture.
In addition, APHIS is proposing
changes to the regulations to reflect
provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill
recently enacted. Section 10204 of Title
X of the Food, Conservation, and Energy
Act of 2008 (Farm Bill) requires the
Secretary of Agriculture to take action
on each issue identified in the
document entitled ‘‘Lessons Learned
and Revisions under Consideration for
APHIS’ Biotechnology Framework,’’ and
where appropriate, promulgate
regulations. APHIS is proposing certain
regulatory changes concerning permit
application information requirements,
permit conditions, records, and reports
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60009
that address many of the considerations
outlined in Section 10204.
APHIS is also aligning this proposed
rule with recommendations arising from
the 2005 audit of the USDA Office of
Inspector General entitled ‘‘Controls
Over Issuance of Genetically Engineered
Release Permits.’’
II. Background
A. APHIS Role in Federal Regulation of
Genetically Engineered Organisms
Under the Coordinated Federal
Framework for Regulation of
Biotechnology,1 USDA works with the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
and the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) to ensure that the
development and testing of
biotechnology products occur in a
manner that is safe for plant and animal
health, human health, and the
environment. USDA and EPA are the
agencies responsible for protecting U.S.
agriculture and the environment. EPA is
responsible for the human health,
animal health, and environmental safety
issues raised by any pesticidal
substance produced in genetically
engineered (GE) organisms. FDA has
authority over the safety of the whole
food product other than the pesticidal
components regulated by EPA.
B. Current Regulations in 7 CFR Part
340
APHIS administers regulations in 7
CFR part 340, ‘‘Introduction of
Organisms and Products Altered or
Produced Through Genetic Engineering
Which are Plant Pests or Which There
is Reason to Believe are Plant Pests’’
(referred to below as the regulations).
The current regulations govern the
introduction (importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment) of certain GE organisms
termed ‘‘regulated articles.’’ Regulated
articles are essentially GE organisms
which might pose a risk as a plant pest.
APHIS first promulgated these
regulations in 1987 under the authority
of the Federal Plant Pest Act of 1957
(FPPA) and the Plant Quarantine Act of
1912 (PQA), two acts that were
subsumed into the Plant Protection Act
(PPA, 7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) in 2000,
along with other provisions.
Under the current regulations, a GE
organism is a regulated article if it is a
plant pest or if the Administrator has
reason to believe it is a plant pest; more
specifically:
1 The Coordinated Framework is described in a
notice published in the Federal Register on June 26,
1986 (51 FR 23302). The notice may be viewed at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/brs/fedregister/
coordinated_framework.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60010
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
‘‘if the donor organism, recipient organism,
or vector or vector agent belongs to any
genera or taxa designated in § 340.2 and
meets the definition of plant pest, or is an
unclassified organism and/or an organism
whose classification is unknown, or any
product which contains such an organism, or
any other organism or product altered or
produced through genetic engineering which
the Administrator determines is a plant pest
or has reason to believe is a plant pest.’’
(Definition of regulated article, § 340.1)
In other words, APHIS regulates the
introduction (importation, interstate
movement, and environmental release)
of GE organisms if (1) any of the
recipient, genetic donor, or vector
organisms are plant pests or of unknown
classification or (2) the Administrator
has determined or has reason to believe
the GE organism is a plant pest. As
constructed the regulations apply to GE
microorganisms, insects, and other
traditional types of plant pests and to
any GE plants if plant pest organisms
(bacterial and viral plant pathogens) are
the donor organisms and vector agents
used in the creation of these GE plants.
Taxa containing ‘‘known plant pests’’
are those listed in current § 340.2.
Current regulations also include a
petition procedure (§ 340.5) which
allows petitioners to ask APHIS to add
or subtract taxa from the list in § 340.2.
That list has not been amended since it
was established in 1987.
As defined under the current
regulations and the PPA, most plants are
not plant pests, with the exception of a
few parasitic plant species, such as
striga, witchweed, and dodder.
The primary procedure for regulation
under the PPA is the issuance of a
permit, which is an authorization by the
Secretary to move plants, plant
products, biological control organisms,
plant pests, noxious weeds, or articles
under conditions prescribed by the
Secretary. The PPA also authorizes the
Secretary to determine which classes of
the above articles must have a permit to
be moved. Conditions associated with
those permits can be tailored to achieve
the appropriate level of regulatory
control to make it unlikely that actions
under the permit would result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed.
APHIS currently uses a permit and
notification system to authorize
importation, interstate movement and
release into the environment (currently
referred to as ‘‘introductions’’) of certain
GE organisms. Under the current
regulations, all regulated articles are
eligible for the permitting procedure,
but only certain plants are eligible for
the notification procedure. Currently,
most regulated GE plants are introduced
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
under notification, which is a
streamlined procedure. Examples of GE
plants introduced under the notification
procedure are those GE plants altered to
be resistant to certain insects or
herbicides. GE plants that do not meet
the notification eligibility criteria and
all other GE organisms, such as
microbes and insects, must be
introduced under the permit procedure
in current § 340.4. In recent years,
APHIS has processed most notifications
and permits through its electronic, epermitting system that is accessible by
the internet at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/
learn_epermits.shtml.
In making a regulatory determination
for a permit or notification for a GE
organism subject to the part 340
regulations, APHIS makes such a
determination on whether the actions
under notification or permit are unlikely
to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest. This
determination takes into account
various risk factors, including, among
other things, a low risk that the GE
organism or its progeny can persist,
reproduce, and establish without human
assistance. Other risk factors that would
support an ‘‘unlikely’’ determination
would be minimal availability of
suitable hosts or habitats for the
organism and low risk that the organism
may cause damage to plants and plant
products.
Regarding the risk of introduction or
dissemination of the GE organism as a
plant pest, an ‘‘unlikely’’ determination
takes into consideration both the nature
of the organism (i.e., low risk that the
organism or its progeny can persist,
reproduce, establish, and spread
without human assistance) and any
additional mitigations that are placed
upon the organism that restrict its
movement and make its unauthorized
introduction or dissemination unlikely.
The notification procedure was first
added to the regulations in 1993, and
then amended in 1997 to allow a
broader range of plant species to be
eligible for the procedure. The
notification procedure was designed to
be a streamlined procedure with the
eligibility criteria and performance
standards already built into the
regulations. Over the past decade,
APHIS has typically authorized 700–
1200 notifications per year.
As part of the notification procedure,
applicants must adhere to performance
standards set forth by APHIS for proper
confinement of the GE plants. The goal
of proper confinement is to ensure that
the GE plants do not persist in the
environment. Under the notification
procedure applicants provide
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
information about the introduction
sufficient for APHIS to evaluate
eligibility for the procedure and impacts
on the environment. This information
includes information on the plant
species, introduced gene(s), location(s),
and anticipated time frame for the
introduction.
For notifications, the eligibility
criteria and the performance standards
stated in the regulations must be met,
but APHIS does not prescribe how the
performance standards must be met. For
example, one of the performance
standards in § 340.3(c)(5) requires that
‘‘The field trial must be conducted such
that (i) The regulated article will not
persist in the environment, and (ii) No
offspring can be produced that could
persist in the environment.’’ The
responsible person might meet this
standard in a field trial by isolating the
regulated GE plants at a sufficient
distance to preclude gene flow from the
GE plant to sexually compatible plants
in the vicinity. Another design protocol
might meet the same performance
standard by planting the GE plant at a
time in the growing season when
surrounding plants of the same species
would not be biologically capable of
being fertilized by pollen from the GE
plant (temporal isolation).
The regulations in current § 340.3(e)
specify that the APHIS notification
procedure must be completed within 30
days for environmental release and
importations and within 10 days for the
interstate movement of a regulated
article. If APHIS completes the review
process and finds that all regulatory
requirements have been met, the
notification is authorized in a process
termed ‘‘acknowledgement,’’ and the
applicant can proceed with the
introduction under the terms of the
notification. Notifications are valid for
one year from the date of introduction.
Approximately 10% of APHIS
authorizations are done under the
permitting procedure. The permitting
procedure, found in § 340.4 of the
current regulation, describes the types
of permits, information required for
permit application, the standard permit
conditions, and administrative
information (e.g., time frames, appeal
procedure, etc.). Permits include
specific conditions that must be
followed by the permit holder. Standard
permit conditions are listed in the
regulation, and APHIS can supplement
these with additional conditions as
necessary. The current regulations
specify the amount of time that APHIS
is allotted for review of complete permit
applications: 60 days for permits for
importation and interstate movement;
120 days for environmental release.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Some regulated articles are
conditionally exempt from the
requirement for permits when moved
interstate under the conditions
stipulated in the regulation. Conditional
exemptions currently exist in the
regulations for the interstate movement
of certain GE bacteria (Escherichia coli,
Bacillus subtilis), fungi (Saccharomyces
cerevisiae), as well as the plant species
Arabidopsis thaliana. APHIS
established these conditional
exemptions from interstate movement
permit by amending the regulations in
1988 and 1990.
APHIS forwards the applications for
all permits, and notifications, with any
confidential business information
redacted, to State regulators in the
States to which regulated articles will be
moved and/or in which environmental
release is planned. This is done to notify
States of the requested action and to
allow States to review and comment on
proposed releases or importations or
movements.
The current regulations also include
various provisions and prescribed
standards for containers, marking, and
identity that apply to shipments of
regulated articles. For example, there
are instructions regarding how to label
containers of imported regulated articles
with the nature of the contents, origin
and destination, and other information,
and detailed instructions on what
materials (plastic, metal, etc.) and
dimensions may be used for containers
of regulated articles.
Under the current regulations, APHIS
may also grant ‘‘nonregulated status’’ to
a GE organism in accordance with the
procedure described in § 340.6. A
determination of nonregulated status
means that the organism is no longer
subject to the part 340 regulations, and
therefore there is no longer any
requirement for APHIS authorization
under part 340 for a permit or
notification when the GE organism is
imported, moved interstate, or released
into the environment.
C. Plant Protection Act Authority to
Regulate Plant Pests, Noxious Weeds,
and Biological Control Organisms
Under the provisions of the PPA,
Congress has granted the Secretary of
Agriculture authority to develop
regulations in order to detect, control,
eradicate, suppress, prevent, or retard
the spread of plant pests or noxious
weeds. The PPA grants the Secretary
authority to regulate the movement into
and through the United States of any
plant, plant pest, plant product,
biological control organism, noxious
weed, article, or means of conveyance,
in order to prevent the introduction or
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
dissemination of plant pests and
noxious weeds.
The current regulations were
promulgated under former statutes, i.e.,
the FPPA and PQA, which provide
USDA authority to regulate articles that
present a risk of plant pest introduction
or dissemination. In addition to the
provisions of the FPPA and PQA, the
PPA incorporates authority that
previously was under the Noxious Weed
Act of 1974. In order to best evaluate the
risks associated with these GE
organisms and regulate them when
necessary, APHIS needs to exercise its
authorities regarding noxious weeds and
biological control organisms, in addition
to its authority regarding plant pests.
The definition of plant pest in the
PPA is broad and includes living
organisms that could directly or
indirectly injure, damage, or cause
disease in any plant or plant product (7
U.S.C. § 7702(14)). Under the PPA,
organisms which could be plant pests
include:
• Protozoans
• Non-human animals
• Parasitic plants
• Bacteria
• Fungi
• Viruses or viroids
• Infectious agents or other pathogens
• Any article similar to or allied with
any of the above articles.
The definition of noxious weed in the
PPA includes:
* * * any plant or plant product that can
directly or indirectly injure or cause damage
to crops (including nursery stock or plant
products), livestock, poultry, or other
interests of agriculture, irrigation, navigation,
the natural resources of the United States, the
public health, or the environment. (PPA
§ 7702(10))
An important distinction between
noxious weeds and plant pests is that
noxious weeds under the PPA are
always plants or plant products. Plant
pests are usually not plants (with the
exception of certain parasitic plants
such as dodder, striga, and witchweed),
but are other types of organisms that
harm plants.
III. Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Regulatory Scope (§ 340.0
Scope and general restrictions)
We propose to better align the
regulations with the PPA authorities in
order to ensure that the environmental
release, importation, or interstate
movement of GE organisms does not
pose a risk of introducing or
disseminating plant pests or noxious
weeds. Although the current program
has been effective in ensuring the safe
environmental release, interstate
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60011
movement, and importation of
genetically engineered organisms,
technological advances have led to the
possibility of developing GE organisms
that do not fit within the plant pest
definition, but may cause environmental
or other types of physical harm or
damage covered by the definition of
noxious weed in the PPA. Therefore, we
consider that it is appropriate to align
the regulations with both the plant pest
and noxious weed authorities of the
PPA.
1. Genetically Engineered Organisms
Subject to 7 CFR part 340
We are proposing to revise the scope
of the regulations in § 340.0 to make it
clear that decisions regarding which
organisms are regulated remain sciencebased and take both plant pest and
noxious weed risks into account. The
proposed scope of the regulations states
that genetically engineered organisms
whose importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment would be subject to the
regulations are:
Genetically engineered plants if:
(i) The unmodified parent plant from
which the GE plant was derived is a
plant pest or noxious weed, or
(ii) The trait introduced by genetic
engineering could increase the potential
for the GE plant to be a plant pest or
noxious weed, or
(iii) The risk that the GE plant poses
as a plant pest or noxious weed is
unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines
that the GE plant poses a plant pest or
noxious weed risk.
Genetically engineered non-plant,
non-vertebrate organisms if:
(i) The recipient organism can directly
or indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in plants or plant
products; or
(ii) The GE organism has been
engineered in such a way that it may
increase the potential for it to be a plant
pest: or
(iii) The risk that the GE organism
poses as a plant pest is unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines
that the GE organism poses a plant pest
risk.
Under the current regulations, there is
no explicit statement of the relative
responsibilities of the Administrator
and regulated parties in determining
whether an organism met the definition
for regulated article and therefore would
be subject to the regulations. Under the
proposed regulations, the responsible
person for a GE organism could
correctly apply the criteria in § 340.0 to
determine whether the GE organism is
subject to the regulations. Alternatively,
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60012
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
the Administrator could determine any
GE organism to be regulated after
determining that the GE plant poses a
plant pest or noxious weed risk.
In many cases, it will be very
straightforward for a responsible person
to apply these criteria and determine
that a GE organism is subject to the
regulations. For example, the GE
organism would clearly be subject to the
regulations if the recipient organism
were a plant pest or noxious weed. A GE
organism would also clearly be subject
to the regulations if there was little data
or previous experience available
concerning the recipient organism’s
plant pest or noxious weed potential, or
the type of modification, with the result
that it is difficult to do a reliable
evaluation of the risks that the GE
organism may be a plant pest or noxious
weed.
In other cases, it may not be readily
apparent to the responsible person for a
GE organism whether or not the
organism falls within the scope of
§ 340.0 and is regulated. For this reason,
persons who are not sure about whether
a GE organism falls within the
regulations or who maintain that a
particular GE organism is not subject to
the regulations based on their belief that
it is not an organism within the scope
of § 340.0 may consult with APHIS.
A GE organism may be within the
scope of the regulations based on the
information available at the time of the
determination, which is usually less
information than is available when the
Administrator evaluates, for example,
whether a regulated GE organism should
be considered for an exemption from the
requirement for a permit, or should be
considered for a determination of
nonregulated status (see discussion of
§ 340.6 below regarding nonregulated
status). In other words, this scope
determination has one purpose (to
determine whether regulation is
necessary at all) and is based on one
level of knowledge about a GE organism,
while determinations regarding such
things as necessary permit conditions or
exemptions or nonregulated status have
a different purpose and are based on a
different level of knowledge about a GE
organism.
It is important to note that while a GE
organism may be within the scope of the
regulations due to certain identified
plant pest or noxious weed risks, it may
also be within the scope of the
regulations if there is not enough
information about the GE organism’s
potential plant pest or noxious weed
risks to make a decision regarding those
risks. At the early stages of developing
a GE organism, there may not be
sufficient information available about
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
the organism to clearly determine the
potential associated plant pest or
noxious weed risks. Unknown risks
might lead to a determination by the
Administrator that a GE organism
should be subjected to regulatory
oversight if APHIS lacks familiarity with
the non-transformed recipient organism
or the introduced trait.
The proposed scope makes it clear
that the mere act of genetic engineering
does not trigger regulatory oversight or
mean that a GE organism will pose risks
as a plant pest or noxious weed. Instead,
it clarifies that APHIS would subject a
GE organism to regulatory oversight
based upon known plant pest and
noxious weed risks of the parent
organisms, or based upon the traits of
the GE organism, or based upon the
possibility of unknown risks as a plant
pest or noxious weed when insufficient
information is available.
Consultation With APHIS Regarding the
Scope of These Regulations
The criteria described in the scope
should help developers form a
reasonable expectation as to whether
their GE organism is within the scope of
the regulations, based on the nature of
the parent organisms, the engineered
traits, and the amount of information
available regarding the organism and
similar organisms.
APHIS anticipates that initially the
range of GE organisms that the
Administrator may determine to be
covered by the proposed regulatory
scope will be broad. This will be due to
both an initial measured
implementation of the revised
regulatory oversight as well as to the
application of the scope criteria to the
transformed organisms and recipient
traits. Over time, the range of GE
organisms subject to oversight is
expected to decrease as APHIS becomes
more familiar with these organisms and
receives information from which it can
reach a conclusion that these GE
organisms or groups of organisms do not
present increased or unfamiliar plant
pest or noxious weed risks. Because the
Administrator may make such a
determination at any time the
Administrator receives information that
a GE organism is within the scope,
APHIS expects that developers will seek
early consultation with APHIS on
whether the regulatory scope covers
their GE organism. Since it is generally
necessary for research or business plans
to include, as early as possible, elements
addressing regulatory processing,
approval, and compliance, it will be in
the interest of the developers to
determine the regulatory status of their
GE organism prior to contemplating its
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
movement or environmental release.
Therefore, APHIS will offer to consult
with a developer of a GE organism
regarding whether the GE organism is
within the scope of the proposed
regulations.
After consultation and review of
available information, the Administrator
will respond in writing as to whether
the Administrator has determined that
the GE organism is within the scope of
the regulations. APHIS plans to make
information publicly available by
posting and maintaining information on
its Web site about the determinations it
makes pursuant to this consultation
process to help the public and regulated
entities understand which organisms are
subject to the regulations.
We welcome suggestions from the
public on the most appropriate ways to
provide administrative guidance to the
public on the issue of which GE
organisms are within the scope of the
regulations. The Agency is especially
interested in ways which will balance
transparency with the efficient use of
Agency resources in conducting
consultations and communicating
information to the public regarding
which GE organisms are within the
scope of the regulations.
Organisms Specifically Excluded From
the Scope of the Regulations
Specifically excluded from the
proposed regulatory scope are GE
microorganisms that are regulated as
biological control organisms by the EPA
under provisions of the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act (FIFRA). APHIS concludes that
there is no need for such GE organisms
to be evaluated by both agencies. EPA
is already evaluating the environmental
safety of such organisms with respect to
their impact on the entire environment,
including plants. We also propose to
retain an exclusion from the current
regulations for GE microorganisms
where the recipient microorganism is
not a plant pest and which have
resulted from the addition of genetic
material from a donor organism where
the material is well characterized and
contains only non-coding regulatory
regions.
Effect of Noxious Weed Authority on
the Scope of the Proposed Regulations
The definition of noxious weed
encompasses plants that pose risks akin
to plant pests, because it includes ‘‘any
plant or plant product’’ that can ‘‘injure
or cause damage to crops * * * other
interests of agriculture * * * or the
environment’’, but also includes plants
that can pose harm to non-plant
organisms, such as humans. Therefore
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
evaluation of noxious weed risk
expands what we can consider, while
still including those risks examined
under the plant pest approach. When
considering risks associated with a GE
plant, we would continue to consider
whether it can harm plants, as well as
whether it can cause the other types of
physical harm or damage described in
the definition for noxious weed.
The first consideration in determining
if a plant is a noxious weed is
identifying what direct injury or damage
(physical harm) the plant causes. If
direct harm or damage is established,
the next consideration is to evaluate any
indirect damage the plant may cause to
interests of agriculture, irrigation,
navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the
environment. In general, federally listed
noxious weeds are plants that are likely
to be aggressively invasive, have
significant negative impacts, and are
extremely difficult to manage or control
once established.
The distinction between a weed and
a noxious weed warrants emphasis.
‘‘Weeds,’’ in the broadest sense of the
word, could include any plant growing
where and/or when it is unwanted; even
plants that are desirable in some settings
may be considered weeds in others. In
a narrower sense, weeds are invasive,
often non-native, plants which impact
natural and managed ecosystems, often
with significant negative consequences
due to lost yields, changes in
management practices, altered herbicide
use, etc. Only a fraction of these
problematic weeds are considered to be
so invasive, so harmful, and so difficult
to control that Federal regulatory
intervention to prevent their
introduction or dissemination is
justified, and these are the focus of the
regulatory controls placed on them by
APHIS. However, any weed, and
virtually any plant or plant product, can
be evaluated by APHIS to determine
whether its characteristics and potential
60013
impacts warrant its listing as a noxious
weed.
APHIS currently lists 98 aquatic,
terrestrial, or parasitic plant taxa as
noxious weeds. The species included in
the list illustrate the kinds of plants
APHIS considers to be sufficiently
invasive, damaging, and difficult to
control to be deemed noxious weeds.
Table 1 describes some specific
examples from the Federal noxious
weed list and the kinds of impacts
noxious weeds can have, to illustrate
the types of effects APHIS will be
looking for when evaluating whether GE
plants reviewed under part 340 have
any potential noxious weed traits. The
experience and precedents developed
by the APHIS–PPQ noxious weed
program provide a guide for the
regulation of plants that may be noxious
weeds, and we intend to apply it to the
consideration of GE plants in the same
way.
TABLE 1—EXAMPLES OF IMPACTS CAUSED BY FEDERALLY LISTED NOXIOUS WEEDS
Impact
Description of impact
Example species
Lost productivity of
crop fields.
Noxious weeds may directly compete
with crop plants for limited resources,
dramatically reducing yields.
Parasitic damage to
crops.
Parasitic plants can cause significant
reductions in yield by attaching themselves to a host plant, removing nutrients and ultimately killing it.
Grazing animals may avoid noxious
weeds and consume the more favorable pasture species, resulting in increased noxious weed populations at
the expense of more favorable species. Noxious weeds may also
outcompete desirable pasture species.
Many noxious weeds are toxic, harming
humans or livestock either when consumed or by direct contact.
Cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica) infests over 20 crop species; it releases
chemicals into the soil that suppress crop growth and causes damaging
puncture wounds to plant roots, bulbs, and tubers. Other examples include
Benghal dayflower (Commelina benghalensis), red rice (Oryza spp.), and
kikuyugrass (Pennisetum clandestinum).
Federally listed noxious parasitic plants include the dodders (Cuscuta spp.)—
with common names like strangleweed, devil’s-guts, hellbine, and witch’s
hair—and witchweed (Striga spp.), which causes devastating losses in corn,
sorghum, and rice.
Serrated tussock (Nassella trichotoma) has heavily infested large areas, leaving
them completely incapable of supporting livestock.
Reduced productivity
of pasture.
Injury to humans or
livestock.
Unchecked overgrowth.
Physical obstructions.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Disruption of water
flow.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Noxious weeds may be capable of
completely dominating the landscape
and preventing the use of cultivated
or pasture lands for agriculture.
Growth rate and habit of some noxious
weeds may physically hamper the
movement of livestock and humans,
or interfere with navigation of waterways.
Aquatic noxious weeds may disrupt
water flow, adversely affecting irrigation, drainage and flood control canals, city water intakes, and recreational water use.
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Cape tulip (Homeria spp.) contains a cardiac glycoside, which can be fatal to
livestock. Contact with giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) causes
painful skin blisters. Three-cornered jack (Emex australis) and devil’s thorn
(Emex spinosa) both bear spiny fruits that can cripple or cause injury to livestock or other animals.
Mile-a-minute vines (Mikania cordata and M. micrantha) can entirely smother
fields and forests in a dense, tangled mass of vines. A single plant of the
aquatic weed giant salvinia (Salvinia spp.) can blanket 40 square miles in 3
months, and produce an underwater mat 3 feet thick.
Certain mesquites (Prosopis spp.), jointed prickly pear (Opuntia aurantiaca),
and African boxthorn (Lycium ferocissimum) form impenetrable thickets filled
with thorns or needles, blocking the movement of grazing animals, injuring
them or preventing access to food and water.
Notable examples include hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata), giant salvinia (Salvinia
spp.), and Chinese waterspinach (Ipomoea aquatica). Dense mats of oxygen
weed (Lagarosiphon major) can completely shut down operation of hydroelectric plants.
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60014
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1—EXAMPLES OF IMPACTS CAUSED BY FEDERALLY LISTED NOXIOUS WEEDS—Continued
Description of impact
Example species
Habitat alteration .....
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Impact
Noxious weeds may severely alter
water quality by changing oxygen
and nutrient content, may dramatically lower local water tables, or
could so significantly outcompete or
overgrow other vegetation resulting in
a complete ecological shift of the
habitat.
Infestation of lakes and ponds with hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata) can alter aquatic ecosystems so drastically that native plants are entirely eliminated, rendering the habitat unsuitable for fish and other wildlife.
As discussed above, APHIS’
determination that a plant is a noxious
weed is based on notable physical harm
or injury caused by the plant. The
elements of the noxious weed definition
include a number of interests that might
be damaged by noxious weeds including
not only plants but irrigation,
navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, the
environment and interests of
agriculture. Often APHIS quantifies the
physical harm or injury in terms of
economic losses. Loss in commodity
value due to the presence of noxious
weeds in seeds, for example, is a
consequence of the anticipated physical
damage that would be caused if the seed
containing a noxious weed were
distributed and planted; the economic
loss is never simply the result of market
preference to have commodities free of
certain noxious weed seeds in and of
itself, in the absence of any potential
physical damage or harm. APHIS does
not consider significant economic
effects alone that are not linked to
physical damage to be sufficient to
determine a plant is a noxious weed.
Certainly, some noxious weeds can
cause physical harm to the health of
humans or livestock and other animals.
In general, these impacts occur when
individuals come into direct contact
with the noxious plants or plant parts,
which may cause physical injury or are
toxic or otherwise harmful when
consumed. Conceivably, noxious weeds
growing in crop fields could potentially
threaten public health, for example, if
toxic parts of the noxious weeds are
harvested and inadvertently enter the
food supply. If such toxic or otherwise
harmful noxious weed parts were found
in food and caused the food to be
‘‘adulterated’’ within the meaning of the
FFDCA, FDA could take regulatory
action against the food.
Whereas APHIS has no direct role in
evaluating the safety of foods, the
agency plays an important supporting
role in safeguarding the food supply by
protecting the health of plants and
animals at the farm level. When
evaluating whether a particular GE plant
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
may be a noxious weed because it poses
a public health risk when growing in the
environment, APHIS considers toxicity
and other food safety information,
including the type reviewed by EPA and
FDA. In the case of GE plants, APHIS
would not assess the safety of the GE
plant for human or animal
consumption, but would consider
available information about toxicity and
other food safety information in
assessing noxious weed risk posed by
the plants growing in the environment.
It should be noted, moreover, that
most GE plants that APHIS has been
regulating in the past, such as varieties
of GE corn and soybeans modified with
common agronomic traits, do not
qualify as ‘‘noxious weeds’’. But with
the increasing diversity of both
agronomic and non-agronomic traits
being engineered into plants it is
appropriate to place regulatory controls
upon GE plants proportionate to the
likelihood that they may present a
noxious weed risk until the potential
risk can be appropriately evaluated.
How Non-Plant, Non-Vertebrate GE
Organisms Fall Within the Scope of the
Regulations
The proposed revision of the
regulations retains control for potential
plant pest risks posed by non-plant,
non-vertebrate GE organisms. We would
continue to explicitly use the plant pest
provisions of the PPA for regulating
non-plant, non-vertebrate GE organisms
which align with the taxa listed in the
PPA definition of plant pest. In its
reviews of GE non-plant and nonvertebrate species, APHIS will continue
to assess GE insects, fungi, bacteria, and
other non-plant, non-vertebrate
organisms for their potential to pose
risks as plant pests.
The scope of the regulations as
defined above makes it clear that it is
the Administrator, and not the public,
who determines whether a non-plant
organism is within or outside the
proposed scope of the Part 340
regulations. APHIS welcomes public
comment on the proposed concise
criteria that the Administrator would
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
consider when concluding that a GE
organism is not a plant pest. We
envision providing additional
information on the Administrator’s
interpretation on such criteria at the
time of the final rule or in subsequent
administrative guidance.
GE Vertebrate Animals Do Not Fall
Within the Scope of the Regulations
Although the PPA definition of plant
pest includes the potential for a
nonhuman, vertebrate animal to be
considered a plant pest, APHIS decided
at this time that there are no
demonstrated risks or pending GE
animal developments indicating that it
is necessary for the proposed
regulations to evaluate vertebrate GE
animals as potential plant pests.
Because other statutory authorities exist
for addressing GE animals, APHIS could
guard against any plant pest risks that
might be presented by GE vertebrate
animals without directly regulating
them under the regulations in part 340.
On the other hand, we propose to
regulate GE invertebrate animals under
part 340 because many classes of
invertebrates include known plant pests
(e.g., insects, arachnids, nematodes,
gastropods, etc.).
How GE Biological Control Organisms
(BCOs) Fall Within the Scope of the
Regulations
The PPA defines biological control
organism (BCO) as ‘‘any enemy,
antagonist, or competitor used to control
a plant pest or noxious weed’’ (7 U.S.C.
7702(2)). The PPA gives the authority to
regulate plant pests and noxious weeds,
not specifically biocontrol organisms.
APHIS recognizes that BCOs may have
the potential to affect populations of
noxious weeds or plant pests, or become
plant pests themselves. To fall within
the scope of the proposed regulations,
the GE BCO would have to pose a threat
as a plant pest or noxious weed. There
are relatively few examples today of GE
BCOs, but these may become more
common in the future. For example,
some researchers are developing GE
biological control pink bollworms that
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
are sterile, which achieve their
controlling effect by reducing the ability
of fertile, non-GE pink bollworms to
produce offspring. Such GE pink
bollworm BCOs would fall within the
scope of the proposed regulation,
because they are plant pests. Although
there are currently no examples of using
GE plants as BCOs, such a GE plant
would be evaluated under the proposed
regulations to evaluate whether it is a
noxious weed or a plant pest.
Currently, the federal regulation of
microbial BCOs is regulated by EPA
under FIFRA, and this covers GE as well
as non-GE microorganisms used to
mitigate the effect of pests. Unlike the
PPA, which limits the definition of BCO
only to organisms used to control plant
pests and noxious weeds, FIFRA covers
microorganisms used as biological
control for any pest. APHIS considers it
duplicative to have these regulations
include GE microbial BCOs under its
scope since FIFRA already adequately
covers them, so APHIS is proposing that
the regulatory scope language in
§ 340.0(d) would explicitly exclude GE
microorganisms if they are already being
regulated as BCOs by EPA under FIFRA.
We are proposing to only regulate GE
BCO macro-organisms that fall under
the proposed regulatory scope (APHIS–
PPQ currently regulates the macroorganism non-GE BCOs used to control
plant pests and noxious weeds pursuant
to other regulations). APHIS welcomes
public comment on this aspect of its
proposal.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Intrastate Movements of GE Organisms
Between Contained Facilities and
Activities in Contained Facilities Do Not
Fall Within the Scope of the Regulations
Under the current regulations, certain
GE organisms are only regulated by
APHIS if they are imported, moved
interstate, or released into the
environment. The regulations do not
govern intrastate movements between
contained facilities such as laboratories,
nor do they govern such activities as
creating GE organism in a contained
research laboratory. The proposed
revision does not change this aspect of
the regulations.
2. Deleting the List of Organisms Which
Are or Contain Plant Pests
In § 340.2 of the current regulations,
there is a list of taxa that are considered
to be plant pests. Under the proposed
scope, this list is not needed because we
would not use taxonomic classification
of donor and recipient organisms to
determine if a GE organism is regulated.
When in the course of evaluating a GE
organism APHIS considers whether a
donor or recipient species is likely to be
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
a plant pest or noxious weed, we would
consider the most up-to-date pest
information maintained by PPQ. This
information is more specific than the
information in the list of plant pest taxa
in the current regulations, and should
be more useful and reliable than static
lists of taxa. APHIS welcomes public
comment on deletion of the taxa list and
preferred sources of plant pest and
noxious weed information for use under
the proposed regulations.
With deletion of this list from the
regulations, there is also no longer a
need for the procedure currently
described in § 340.5 for amending this
list.
3. Regulating Whole Organisms, Parts,
and Nonliving Products
APHIS proposes to clarify the
regulated status of nonliving plant
products in the regulations. First, the
PPA defines a plant pest only as any
living stage of any of the articles
specifically named in the plant pest
definition that can directly or indirectly
injure, cause damage to, or cause
disease in any plant or plant product.
Moreover, APHIS does not consider
most GE organisms or parts of GE
organisms which cannot reproduce to
present a risk as plant pests or noxious
weeds.
Conversely, we would regulate
importation, interstate movement and
release into the environment of GE
seedlings, seeds, tubers, cuttings, bulbs,
spores, etc., because there is a
reasonable, albeit small, possibility of
reproduction, establishment, and spread
if these were deliberately or accidentally
released into the environment without
authorization.
Viable pollen from GE plants
imported, moved interstate, or released
into the environment would be subject
to the regulations because such
movements of pollen can reasonably
lead to genomes becoming established
in the environment. Similarly, in
circumstances where an article
incidentally contains viable pollen,
during movement, APHIS would
consider the movement regulated. There
are many cases, however, when pollen
may be present but is no longer capable
of producing offspring, e.g., nonviable
or immature pollen. In such cases,
APHIS would not require permits under
this part. The commercial distribution
of cut flowers is one pollen movement
situation that APHIS has considered in
light of the regulations, especially in
cases where the flowers are grown in
other countries then imported only as
cut flowers. APHIS considers these
circumstances to pose little, if any risk,
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60015
and therefore would not require permits
for these activities.
The PPA defines a noxious weed as
encompassing both plants and plant
products. A plant product is defined as
‘‘any flower, fruit, vegetable, root, bulb,
seed, or other plant part that is not
included in the definition of plant; or
any manufactured or processed plant or
plant part.’’ APHIS has regulated GE
organisms under part 340 for over 20
years, and there is no strong evidence to
suggest the need to regulate nonliving
(nonviable) plant products in most
cases. However, if in a specific case the
importation, interstate movement, or
environmental release of nonliving
products of a GE plant may pose
noxious weed risks, APHIS has clear
authority to address those risks by
imposing permit conditions on the
handling of such nonliving products of
the GE organism in the permit issued for
the associated living GE organism. The
proposed regulations state clearly in
§ 340.3(b) that the Administrator may
also assign permit conditions addressing
nonliving plant materials associated
with or derived from GE organisms
when such conditions are needed to
make it unlikely that the nonliving
materials would pose a noxious weed
risk. APHIS invites consultation from
any person considering a movement or
release of nonliving materials derived
from a GE organism who is uncertain as
to whether it would be regulated.
B. Permits for Authorizing Importation,
Interstate Movement and Release Into
the Environment of Certain GE
Organisms
1. Elimination of the Notification
Procedure
APHIS first added the notification
procedure to the regulations in 1993 as
an administratively streamlined
procedure for certain GE plants that met
the eligibility criteria described in the
regulation. Rather than using
customized requirements, like the
permit conditions used for the
permitting procedure, the notification
procedure uses generalized performance
standards that are described in the
regulation itself. The use of the
performance standards that do not vary
from one notification to the next is one
of the ways that the more rapid
administrative turnaround was
achieved. In some ways, the term
‘‘notification’’ has been misleading to
the public, since they do not realize that
sending a notification does not mean
automatic authorization by APHIS.
APHIS reviews notifications to verify
that the GE plant meets the eligibility
criteria, and also evaluates whether the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60016
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
proposed importation, interstate
movement or environmental release can
be done in a manner that meets the
performance standards described in the
regulation. In many ways, these APHIS
evaluations for notifications are very
similar to those done for permit
applications, but the notification
procedure relies on applicants agreeing
to meet the performance standards
described in the regulation rather than
submitting an application for APHIS
review describing the specific measures
they will employ for the activity (as is
the case for permits). With permits, but
not with notifications, APHIS can
accept the proposed measures or add to
them and the result is a set of binding
customized permit conditions.
Because the notification procedure
uses only the performance standards in
the regulations, it is more
administratively streamlined, but the
general nature of the standards has
made it difficult for APHIS inspectors to
determine if a notification holder is in
compliance and can also make
enforcement more difficult. For
example, under the current regulations,
one of the performance standards for
notifications relevant to environmental
releases states that: ‘‘The field trial must
be conducted such that (1) the regulated
article will not persist in the
environment, and (2) no offspring can
be produced that could persist in the
environment.’’ Conversely, specific
conditions which APHIS places on
permits are unambiguous, easy to verify
at inspection, and easier to enforce. A
specific permit condition that could be
used to address just part of the
performance standard described above
might read: ‘‘After final harvest of the
GE corn plants covered under this
environmental release permit, the site
will be monitored every 4 weeks for the
emergence of volunteer corn seedlings
for one year, and any emerging
volunteer plants will be devitalized
before they produce pollen. Records of
the monitoring and management of
volunteers must be maintained by the
permit holder and made available to
APHIS upon request.’’
APHIS employs performance
standards in many of its regulations,
where appropriate. For example, we
propose to employ a performance
standard in another part of this
proposal, container requirements for
shipments of GE organisms. In that case,
it is possible to employ a
straightforward standard that the
container must not break or leak when
subjected to ordinary handling in
transportation. The use of performance
standards under the notification
procedure has some benefits, such as
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
providing the responsible person with
flexibility in how the standard is met,
e.g., allowing for appropriate change in
protocols used during the growing
season. However, there are some
disadvantages in not specifically
enumerating the specific measures that
constitute compliance with the
regulations. The permitting procedure
does not have this disadvantage,
because the permit conditions specify
which actions need to be taken by the
responsible person to be in compliance.
APHIS considered revising the
performance standards and retaining the
notification procedure, but this would
not have remedied its shortcomings,
especially the lack of specificity that is
a necessity of using broadly applicable,
performance standards in the
regulations.
Under the proposed regulations where
all authorizations will be done under a
permitting procedure, the permit
conditions will provide more specific
information about what procedures the
permit holder must follow in order to be
in compliance. In the proposed rule, we
are describing in detail the types of core
permit conditions that will be imposed,
plus the additional permit conditions
that the Administrator can place upon
the permit holder in order to make it
unlikely that actions under the permit
would result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed.
In view of the above discussion,
APHIS has determined that it would
have more flexible, risk-appropriate
oversight, better regulatory enforcement
and improved transparency if all
regulated importations, interstate
movements, and releases into the
environment are authorized under the
permitting procedure. The use of the
permitting procedure in lieu of
notifications is also necessary for APHIS
to address some of the
recommendations arising from the OIG
Report and the provisions of the 2008
Farm Bill. For example, the OIG
recommendations have led to proposed
provisions in the regulations that will
enable APHIS to add permit conditions
to require additional reports during the
course of an environmental release, the
submission of notices to APHIS if the
permit holder decides not to conduct
the environmental release, and 7-day,
pre-plant notices in the case of GE
plants engineered to produce
pharmaceutical or industrial substances.
The last recommendation is already
being implemented as a permit
condition, because all of these
authorizations are done under the
permitting procedure. The OIG
recommendations cannot be
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
implemented under the notification
procedure, because under the current
regulations APHIS does not have the
ability to attach conditions to
notifications. This provides additional
justification for APHIS to propose the
elimination of the notification
procedure. The APHIS proposal to
eliminate the notification procedure is
an effective way to address several of
the provisions of the Farm Bill, such as
the changes to the requirements for
recordkeeping and reporting.
2. Revisions to Permit Procedures
APHIS proposes to reorganize the
regulations to improve the clarity of the
permit application and evaluation
procedures. The proposed change is
more a reorganization than substantive
change, and should enhance the
transparency of the regulations to the
public. The permitting procedure will
continue to identify and obtain
information relevant to evaluating the
risks associated with a proposed
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment, and
determine and document whether, and
under what conditions, the activity
should be allowed. The proposed
regulations related to the issuance of
permits are divided into two sections.
The first is proposed § 340.2, Procedure
for permits, which describes permit
types, the procedure for permit
application (including information
requirements), and the Agency’s
administrative actions for permits. The
second is proposed § 340.3, Permit
conditions, which describes the general
types of conditions that APHIS may add
to a permit, and the obligations of the
responsible person after permit
issuance.
APHIS is proposing explicit
procedures for amendment, transfer of
responsibility, and revocation of permits
in order to establish clear regulatory
procedures that can increase efficiency
yet maintain adequate safety. Currently
the APHIS administrative practices to
amend, transfer, and revoke permits
have not been explicit in the regulation,
and this addition will provide increased
transparency and efficiency.
The proposed changes organize the
regulations to more clearly reflect the
procedural steps in the application,
evaluation, and issuance of a permit (see
Figure 1). First, the different types of
permits (importation, interstate
movement, and environmental release)
are described in § 340.2(b), as are new
subcategories of environmental release
permits. Second, the types of
information that must be submitted with
a permit application are described in
§ 340.2(c). The permit type, as well as
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
the nature of the environmental release
(if the permit is for a release), affect the
application information requirements.
Third, § 340.2(d) outlines the procedural
and administrative steps of issuing a
permit. Finally, the attachment of
conditions to permits, which is also
dependent upon permit type and release
category, is described in § 340.3. Each of
these permit-related sections of the
proposed regulations is discussed
below.
60017
Figure 1. Schematic of activities
associated with issuance and
enforcement of permits, showing
associated sections of the proposed
regulation.
Permit Types and Environmental Release Categories (§ 340.2(b))
↓
Application Information Requirements, by Type (§ 340.2(c))
↓
Permit Evaluation Procedures (§ 340.2(d))
↓
Assignment of Permit Conditions (§ 340.3)
↓
Compliance, Enforcement, and Remediation Activities (§ 340.7)
3. Permit Types and Environmental
Release Categories (§ 340.2(b))
As discussed above in the background
section, APHIS currently uses two
procedures—notification and permits—
to authorize the importation, interstate
movement and release into the
environment of GE organisms
considered to be regulated articles
under this part. The permitting
procedure can be used for all regulated
articles, but the notification procedure
can be used only for certain GE plants
that meet the eligibility criteria
described in the regulations. Whereas
permits are issued with explicit permit
conditions which must be met by the
permit holder, notifications have
generalized ‘‘performance standards’’
described in the regulation and
therefore do not vary from one
notification to the next. Currently,
approximately 90% of APHIS
authorizations are done under the
notification procedure.
Under the proposed system, which
would eliminate notifications, APHIS
would continue to issue three types of
permits—interstate movement,
importation, and environmental release.
The procedures for the first two types of
permits are relatively straightforward,
and the conditions usually required for
these permits address risks that are very
similar from one shipment to another.
We propose only minor adjustments to
the procedures for interstate movement
and import permits. In general,
deliberate release of GE organisms into
the environment presents a greater risk
of introducing or disseminating plant
pests and noxious weeds, and thus
requires more careful oversight, than
shipments of GE organisms into and
across the country in secure containers.
Of the three permit types, only
environmental release permits would be
differentiated into broad risk-related
categories by the Administrator. This
categorization would occur prior to the
detailed and specific APHIS evaluation
of an individual permit application.
Table 2 summarizes the relationship of
the three permit types and categories
that pertain to environmental release
permits.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED PERMIT TYPES AND CATEGORIES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL RELEASE PERMITS
Type
Use
Importation permit ..............................................
For securely moving a GE organism into the
United States.
For securely moving a GE organism from any
State into or through any other State.
For releases into the environment, outside the
constraints of physical containment that are
found in a laboratory, contained greenhouse, fermenter, other contained structure,
or secure shipment.
Interstate Movement ...........................................
Environmental Release:* ....................................
Release
Release
Release
Release
Release
Category
Category
Category
Category
Category
A .........................................
B .........................................
C ........................................
D ........................................
E (non-plants) ....................
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
* In some cases, an environmental release permit may also incorporate permits for importation or interstate movement when such movements
are incidental to the environmental release.
The proposed sorting system for
environmental release permits includes
five categories: Four for releases of GE
plants (Categories A–D) and one for
releases of all other GE organisms
(Category E). Releases of GE non-plant
organisms (Category E) would be placed
into a single category and reviewed on
a case-by-case basis. APHIS considered
the creation of smaller risk-related
subcategories for non-plants, but APHIS
has received too few permit applications
to warrant the creation of these smaller
groupings. Releases of plants would be
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
grouped into four categories, as
described below.
APHIS considered a tiered permitting
system which would sort proposed
environmental releases of plants into a
number of risk-based categories. Lowest
risk releases would be assigned to Tier
1, slightly higher risk releases in Tier 2,
and so on. In such a system, tier
assignment is analogous to a risk rating.
In developing the specifics of
implementing such a system in the
regulations, however, APHIS found that
it was challenging to pre-assign all
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
conceivable releases into tiers
representing discrete levels of risk.
There are a large number of risk factors
that contribute to the overall risk
associated with any given release. These
factors include reproductive biology and
growth habit of the species, potential for
gene flow to other species, phenotype
engineered into the organism,
familiarity with the genetic material
used, safety of any expressed products,
scale of the release, location, duration,
experience, and compliance history of
the applicant, proximity to threatened
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60018
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
and endangered species, and other
factors.
Sorting proposed releases considering
all relevant factors would lead to an
unwieldy system with many risk-based
categories, and would essentially
require a full risk assessment prior to
assigning a proposed release to the
appropriate risk category. Consequently,
it would be nearly impossible for
applicants and the public to predict the
risk tier to which a proposed release
would be assigned.
APHIS proposes that the permitting
system for environmental release
permits would assign releases into
administrative categories based upon
two primary risk-related factors
described below, so that the categories
would identify the general types of
releases of plants which share broadly
similar risks and management issues.
This initial administrative sorting
would be followed by an evaluation that
fully characterized the risk of the
proposed release, which would then be
the primary basis for adding necessary
permit conditions. APHIS concludes
that such a system could appropriately
sort most releases into groupings that
are alike enough that they could usually
be treated similarly initially, in terms of
application information requirements
and evaluation of potential risks. In
most cases the initial groupings would
also result in a similar level of oversight
of the release and conditions attached to
the permit-but any final determination
of the permit category, oversight and
permit conditions would depend on the
results of the APHIS evaluation.
Using this approach, there is no prior
conclusion that every release within the
same category poses the same level of
risk. Likewise, releases in different
categories do not necessarily pose
greatly different risks. For this reason,
APHIS would not refer to these
groupings as ‘‘tiers,’’ as this implies an
incremental increase in risk from tier to
tier, but would instead label them as
‘‘categories’’ which are lettered and not
numbered.
APHIS developed the proposed
sorting scheme by first examining the
types of releases that typically are
authorized under its current regulations.
APHIS then modified the categories to
make them more explicitly connected to
plant pest and noxious weed risks.
The two primary factors APHIS
identified as most relevant to define its
sorting system for environmental release
permits were the (1) ability of the
unmodified recipient plant species to
persist in the wild and (2) potential of
the engineered trait to cause harm,
injury, or damage, as described in the
definitions of plant pest and noxious
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
weed. Secondary factors, which in some
instances may change the initial
categorization, include: how the
recipient plant is commonly used (e.g.,
as a food or feed crop); the impact of the
engineered trait on the fitness of the GE
plant; and, the degree of uncertainty
associated with the trait and its possible
impacts.
Regarding the persistence factor,
APHIS proposes to group plant species
according to the risk of persistence of
the plant or its progeny in the
environment without human
intervention. Based upon the growth
habit of the plant species and presence
of wild relatives in the United States,
APHIS proposes to sort all plants into
four groups, listed in order of increasing
persistence risk:
• Low: Populations of the recipient
plant are unlikely to persist in the
environment without human
intervention, and the recipient plant has
no interfertile wild relatives in the
United States. Examples include corn,
soybeans, and cotton (except in certain
areas).
• Moderate: Populations of the
recipient plant are known to be weakly
persistent in the environment without
human intervention, or the recipient
plant has interfertile wild relatives in
the United States. Examples include
alfalfa, beets, canola, rice, and tomato.
• High: Populations of the recipient
plant are known to be strongly
persistent in the environment without
human intervention, or the recipient
plant has interfertile wild relatives in
the United States which are aggressive
colonizers. Examples include creeping
bentgrass, poplar, sorghum, and
sunflower.
• Severe: The recipient plant is a
Federally-listed noxious weed or is
known to be similarly aggressive in its
ability to colonize and persist in the
environment without human
intervention. Examples include hydrilla
and kudzu.
These aspects of plant biology and
growth habit are broad indicators of the
increasing likelihood that the plant or
its progeny can reproduce and spread
without human intervention.
‘‘Interfertile wild relatives’’ includes
both wild relatives in the traditional
sense, as well as feral populations of the
same species persisting outside
agroecosystems. The distinction
between ‘‘weakly persistent’’ and
‘‘strongly persistent,’’ is intended to
mean survival without human
intervention for one or very few
generations (weakly persistent) versus
several to many generations (strongly
persistent). APHIS will clarify which
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
species fall into each group by
publishing lists in guidance.
Similarly, with regard to the factor for
potential harm caused by introduced
traits, APHIS proposes to group traits
engineered into plants into four simple
groupings based upon the definitions of
plant pest and noxious weed. The
groups are listed in order of increasing
potential hazard of the engineered trait:
• Low:
Æ Any new proteins or substances
produced are unlikely to be toxic or
otherwise cause serious harm to
humans, vertebrate animals, or
invertebrate organisms upon
consumption of or contact with the
plant or plant parts; and
Æ No morphological changes which
could cause mechanical injury or
damage; and
Æ Introduced sequences are known
not to result in plant disease, and
confers no or very low increased disease
susceptibility.
An example would include
expression of well characterized
proteins known not to be toxic or
harmful, such as a marker gene that
does not pose a food or feed safety
concern, or expression of viral genes
where it is demonstrated that no protein
is produced
• Moderate:
Æ Any new proteins or substances
produced are unlikely to be toxic or
otherwise cause serious harm to humans
or vertebrate animals upon consumption
of or contact with the plant or plant
parts ; or
Æ Novel resistance to the application
of an herbicide; or
Æ Has novel ability to cause
mechanical injury or damage; or
Æ Produces proteins or substances
that are associated with plant disease
that are not prevalent or endemic in the
area of release, or that confer an
increased susceptibility to disease.
Examples include expression of new
CRY proteins, ,mechanisms of herbicide
tolerance (e.g., CP4–EPSPS, which
confers glyphosate tolerance), and
production of viral movement proteins.
• High:
Æ Any new proteins or substances
produced may be toxic or to otherwise
cause serious harm to humans or
vertebrate animals, upon consumption
of or contact with the plant or plant
parts; or
Æ Produces an infectious entity which
can cause disease in plants.
Examples include mercury hyperaccumulators or production of some
pharmaceutical compounds.
• Severe:
Any new proteins or substances
produced are known or likely to be
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
highly toxic or fatal to humans or
vertebrate animals, upon consumption
of or contact with the plant or plant
parts.
These aspects of the engineered trait
are related to harms or damages
associated with plant pests or noxious
weeds. This takes into consideration (1)
the harmfulness of any substances
produced, (2) the possibility of creating
morphological changes that would
cause physical injury, and (3) the
likelihood of increasing plant disease,
either due to risk of creating novel pests
or increased inoculum source. Novel
resistance to an herbicide is included in
the ‘‘moderate’’ category due to the
impacts the trait could have on the
ability to manage the plant or its
progeny.
The proposed use of plant growth
habit and trait harm or injury as the two
main factors for the initial sorting of
environmental releases into categories
uses the two factors to roughly
approximate ‘‘exposure’’ and ‘‘hazard,’’
respectively. Thus, using a combination
of these two factors alone, we propose
the following initial sorting of plant-trait
combinations into release permit
60019
categories (see Table 3). Once
environmental releases of GE plants
have been sorted into the permit
categories shown in Table 3, we will
review and evaluate the information
submitted by the applicant to determine
oversight and permit conditions. The
information requested from applicants
will not be limited to these factors and
is, in fact, designed to allow us to
evaluate any of the risks associated with
noxious weeds and plant pests. In some
instances, our review may result in a
change to the release category
assignment of a GE plant.
TABLE 3—INITIAL SORTING INTO ADMINISTRATIVE PERMIT CATEGORIES (A, B, C, AND D) FOR ENVIRONMENTAL RELEASES
OF GE PLANTS, BASED UPON PERSISTENCE RISK OF THE RECIPIENT PLANT SPECIES AND POTENTIAL HARM OR DAMAGE OF THE ENGINEERED TRAIT
Potential harm or damage of engineered trait
Persistence *
Low
Low ..................................................................................................................................
Moderate ..........................................................................................................................
High ..................................................................................................................................
Severe ..............................................................................................................................
Moderate
High
Severe
A
A
B
D
A
B
B
D
C
C
C
D
D
D
D
D
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
* Persistence risk of the recipient plant species.
The sorting system above presumes
that there is sufficient scientific
information available about the GE plant
to support the categorization. For
example, the phenotype conferred by
inserted sequences and the growth habit
of the plant species in the U.S. must be
well-characterized and based upon
direct empirical observation of the
genetic construct in the recipient plant
species. In cases where less (or nothing)
is known about phenotype of the
engineered trait in the recipient plant
species-such as inference based upon
sequence similarity, protein structure
modeling, or observation of the genetic
construct in other species-the release
category may be changed (from A to B
or B to C) as a result of this uncertainty.
Similarly, lack of familiarity with the
plant species’ behavior in the U.S. or the
techniques needed to mitigate the
likelihood of its persistence could also
change the release category.
APHIS considered whether to adjust
the categories table to acknowledge that
an engineered trait could affect
(enhance or detract from) the other
factor axis, namely the persistence risk
of the nonmodified recipient plant.
Engineered traits such as resistance to
biotic or abiotic stresses could
theoretically increase the fitness of the
plant, and thereby increase the
likelihood that it will persist in the
environment without human assistance.
Considering the range of persistence
risks posed by all of the different plant
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
species sorted into any one of the
proposed groupings, however, APHIS
has concluded that in most instances
the engineered trait would not alter the
likelihood of persistence enough to
warrant a change in initial release
category. However, in cases where the
engineered trait significantly alters plant
growth habit, metabolism, or
reproduction to increase the likelihood
of persistence in the environment,
APHIS could change the release
category accordingly. Examples of such
changes might include converting an
annual species to a perennial or
converting a plant with C3 metabolism
to crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM).
The proposed category system should
provide a simple, transparent way for
APHIS review information in
applications to initially sort releases
into broad, risk-related categories,
which can then be more efficiently
assessed for the actual risks posed by
the release. However, it should be
emphasized that the categories are
intended only for initial sorting, and
other factors are taken into account in
the APHIS evaluation when determining
the specific permit conditions.
APHIS intends that release Category A
will be associated with a level of
regulatory oversight similar to
environmental release notifications
under the current system, and
Categories B and C with a level of
regulatory oversight similar to various
permits that have been issued under the
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
current system. However, it will be
much clearer to the public what types
of oversight will be applied broadly
within each category. As we discussed
above, oversight and permit conditions
with each category will be similar,
though not necessarily identical, for any
plant within the category. Category D
was created to acknowledge the
possibility that some proposed releases
may pose a very high risk of introducing
a highly persistent or harmful plant into
the environment. To date, APHIS has
never been requested to allow releases
that would fall into this category. If an
applicant were to propose a Category D
release, APHIS would only authorize
such releases after imposing extremely
strict levels of oversight akin to high
security quarantine far exceeding that of
Category C that would ensure that the
GE plants could not persist in the
environment. The information
requirements, permit conditions, and
general levels of oversight associated
with each release Category are discussed
below.
This simple sorting system places GE
plants into categories and provides a
relatively clear, simple rationale for
placement in a given category. What
follows is a series of illustrations of
common plant-trait combinations and
the release categories to which they
would be assigned:
• Category A:
Æ Bt corn producing CRY1ab toxin.
The plant is unlikely to persist in the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60020
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
environment and the safety of the
protein has been assessed by the EPA.
Æ Soybeans engineered with
glyphosate tolerance conferred by CP4–
EPSPS. While herbicide tolerance poses
a ‘‘moderate’’ hazard, soybean has no
interfertile wild relatives in the U.S..
• Category B:
Æ Corn producing a new CRY protein.
The plant is unlikely to persist and the
novel CRY protein is likely to be toxic
to some species that live or feed on the
plant (normally Category A), but its
food/feed safety is only inferred from
similarity to other CRY proteins.
Æ Random ‘‘knock-out’’ or antisense
libraries of soybean lines. While the
lines may not likely produce novel
proteins or substances (Category A),
because of the uncertainty associated
with the impacts of genetic engineering
on these lines, they would be treated as
Category B. Well-characterized lines
taken from such libraries that do not
produce new proteins would likely be
treated as Category A.
Æ Kentucky bluegrass engineered
with glyphosate resistance conferred by
CP4–EPSPS. Herbicide resistance is a
‘‘moderate’’ hazard and bluegrass has
interfertile wild relatives in the U.S.
Æ Pines producing an enzyme to
enhance paper production. Pines are
persistent and have interfertile wild
relatives in the United States.
• Category C:
Æ Poplar engineered to produce
enzymes for heavy metal
bioremediation.
• Category D:
Æ Any Federally listed noxious weed
that has been genetically engineered;
any GE plant producing a vertebrate
toxin.
Permits for Environmental Releases of
Plants Making Pharmaceutical and
Industrial (PMPI) Compounds
APHIS considered whether to
continue to issue environmental release
permits for GE plants engineered to
produce pharmaceutical and industrial
compounds if the GE plant species is
the same as, or sexually compatible
with, a species commonly used for food
or feed. APHIS concludes that the
proposed permitting procedure and the
use of stringent permit conditions can
continue to effectively minimize the
risks that may be associated with the
environmental release of such GE
plants. APHIS will continue to impose
permit conditions that take into account
the issues related to the safety of
proteins or other substances that these
plants have been engineered to produce.
Based upon APHIS experience to date,
many releases of GE plants producing
pharmaceutical or industrial substances
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
would fall in Category C, and would
carry the same level of oversight as
current permits for PMPI.
4. Permit Application Information
Requirements (§ 340.2(c))
In the proposed regulations, we
provide greater detail about the basic
application information requirements
that need to be addressed in all permit
applications, as well as additional basic
information required for each permit
type and the categories in the case of
environmental release permits. Under
the current regulation, certain areas
where APHIS routinely needs
information from the applicant do not
become apparent until the applicant
submits the permit application (and
APHIS subsequently follows up for
additional information). Some of the
information requirements related to
recordkeeping, reporting, and
contractual arrangements among the
permit holder and agents are new to the
regulation and reflect, in part, certain
provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill and
also align with recommendations of
USDA’s OIG 2005 Report. For example,
the OIG recommendations have led to
provisions that will enable APHIS to
require geographic coordinates for the
locations of environmental releases.
The differences between the
information required for an application
under the current regulations versus the
proposed regulations may be seen by
comparing current § 340.4 to proposed
§ 340.2(c). Both the current and
proposed application procedures
require information characterizing the
nature of the GE organism, including
detailed molecular biology information
about the expression of the introduced
genetic material. They also both require
information about the type of movement
and/or release planned. The proposed
rule requires more detail in some of
these areas, and more description of the
applicant’s plans and methods to
prevent unauthorized releases, and to
respond to unauthorized releases if they
occur. This information is used in part
by APHIS to formulate the specific
permit conditions. In cases where the
permit is for environmental release, and
would be in permit categories C or D
according to the table in § 340.2(b)(3), a
greater level of detail would be required
for almost all aspects of the activity,
including the recipient organism, the
inserted gene(s), site location and
management practices, and training and
communication among the permit
holder and agents involved in the
activity covered under the permit. This
information would also address the
capability of the organism to persist or
spread in the environment, or include
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
details about how the engineered traits
might be harmful.
5. Permit Conditions (§ 340.3)
Conditions are specific practices or
requirements that an applicant must
follow upon issuance of a permit. Under
the current regulation, the permit
conditions are described in the same
section as the permit procedure itself. In
the proposed revision, the permit
conditions are enumerated in a separate
section (§ 340.3) to accommodate the
additional details to describe conditions
for the three permit types as well as the
categories of environmental release
permits.
The use of permits and permit
conditions gives APHIS and the
responsible person a clearer
understanding as to what actions must
be taken for the permit holder to comply
with the regulation. In the proposed
regulation, APHIS has strived to provide
as much transparency and predictability
as possible about permit conditions
while retaining sufficient flexibility so
that the regulations will be adaptable in
a broad range of cases.
Permits will be issued with the core
permit conditions described in
§ 340.3(a), which are a minimum set of
basic conditions for importation,
interstate movement, and release. The
Administrator may add to these
conditions additional or expanded
conditions when necessary to make it
unlikely that actions under the permit
would result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed.
The Administrator will assign the
permit conditions in a manner that is
commensurate with the risk of the
individual proposed movement or
release. Additional or expanded permit
conditions may include, but are not
limited to, specific requirements for:
reproductive, cultural, spatial, temporal
controls; monitoring; post-termination
land use; site security or access
restrictions; and management practices
such as training of personnel involved
in the release.
The proposed description of permit
conditions elaborates on the ‘‘standard’’
permit conditions found in the current
regulations, and the additional detail is
designed to better communicate with
potential applicants what the
requirements are likely to be for their
particular permit, and will better
support administration of the program,
including compliance and enforcement.
In the current regulation, only
‘‘standard’’ permit conditions are
described, and APHIS has the authority
to place other conditions upon the
permit as deemed necessary by the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Administrator. The proposal for permit
conditions will be more transparent to
the public and this transparency will
better facilitate planning by researchers,
especially those who have not
previously received permits from
APHIS.
The proposed required core permit
conditions consolidate six primary areas
addressed in different parts of the
current regulations to ensure
compliance with the regulation and to
make it unlikely that the permitted
activity will result in the introduction
and dissemination of a plant pest or
noxious weed: Identity, shipment,
unauthorized dissemination,
communication and training, records,
reports and notices. APHIS intends the
list of specific condition areas we
propose in § 340.3 to be used for all
permits we issue as they apply to
importation, interstate movement, and
release into the environment. The
required permit conditions listed in
§ 340.3 represent the permit conditions
that we propose to apply for any type
of permit. Listing them in the
regulations should provide applicants
with the ability to plan their activities
with knowledge of the primary
requirements for all activities that
would have to be met to comply with
the regulations.
For environmental release permits,
proposed § 340.3(a)(4)(iii)(F) would also
require the permit holder to notify
APHIS seven days prior to initiation of
the release if the release is Category C
or D. For all Categories, permit holders
are required to notify APHIS if they do
not conduct the release.
The current regulations require
environmental release permit holders to
submit field test reports to APHIS
within 6 months after termination of a
field test. Under proposed § 340.3(a), the
requirement simply states that the
responsible person shall submit reports
to APHIS at the times specified in the
permit conditions and containing the
information specified in the permit
conditions.
APHIS is also proposing revision of
the regulations to clarify the procedure
it would use for amendment of permit
conditions, transfer of a permit to a
different responsible person, and
revocation of an existing permit. Each of
these additions to the regulations reflect
current administrative practices and the
incorporation of these into the
regulations will make the overall system
more transparent.
Currently, APHIS attaches conditions
to permits at the moment the permit is
issued to the applicant. Under the
current regulations, the permitting
procedure does not include a formal
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
acknowledgement from the applicant
prior to permit issuance that they are
aware of and consent to the permit
conditions. To verify that applicants are
aware of and willing to abide by the
conditions, APHIS proposes to add an
additional administrative step in the
permit procedure in § 340.2(d)(6) to
support administration of the program.
We are proposing to require that
applicants agree prior to permit
issuance that they will comply with all
the permit conditions. Eventually,
APHIS would build this feature into the
existing ePermits system, and in the
interim it would provide alternative
mechanisms, such as e-mail
communications, to implement this step
of the permitting procedure.
APHIS is also proposing to clarify in
§ 340.2(h) of the regulations the
procedure to be used when amendment
of existing permit conditions is sought
by the responsible person or required by
APHIS, as well as the procedure for
transfer of an existing permit to a
different responsible person.
As with the current regulations,
APHIS is retaining the flexibility to
modify permit conditions as needed
under individual circumstances.
Proposed § 340.3 will increase
transparency, yet still allow sufficient
adaptability of the regulations for the
full range of permit applications APHIS
expects to receive today and in the
future. APHIS recognizes that
transparency and predictability for
applicants must be balanced with
maintaining Agency flexibility and
adaptability for years to come under
these regulations. APHIS encourages the
public to comment on the choices we
are proposing here, and we welcome
suggestions for alternative approaches.
APHIS is proposing to revise the
current sections of the regulations for
container requirements for shipments of
GE organisms (§ 340.8) and marking and
identity requirements for imports of GE
organisms (§ 340.7). Rather than the
highly prescriptive approach in the
current regulation, we will use an
approach that is performance based and
can be adapted to the activity that is
being performed. This should provide
greater efficiency for the public as well
as APHIS, yet still achieve the necessary
level of containment during shipments.
We have reorganized this information in
the regulations so that the requirements
are associated with the related activity
under the proposed regulation. For
example, the shipping requirements for
interstate movements under the
conditional exemption have the
requisite shipping conditions stipulated
in the section for conditional
exemptions. Likewise, the shipping
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60021
conditions for import and interstate
movement permits have been placed in
the section for permit conditions, rather
than retaining them in a separate section
as in the current regulations. The
performance-based standards we are
proposing incorporates a simple
performance standard in our proposed
definition of secure shipment, discussed
below: ‘‘Shipment of a package of
sufficient strength and integrity to
withstand leakage of contents, shocks,
pressure changes, and other conditions
incident to ordinary handling in
transportation.’’ APHIS is also
proposing to require applicants to
provide their proposed methods of
secure shipment, and APHIS will
specify the methods of secure shipment
as a permit condition.
APHIS proposes to eliminate the
marking and identity requirements for
imports of GE organisms as a separate
section of the regulations (current
§ 340.7). As with the container standard
issue discussed above, appropriate
labeling and related requirements would
be highly individual depending on the
organism, type of permit, and other
conditions.
APHIS is proposing to include
relevant tribal officials when it provides
copies of permit applications to state
regulatory officials. The current
regulations state that APHIS provides
this information to state regulatory
officials.
6. Elimination of Courtesy Permits
APHIS is also proposing to eliminate
the issuance of courtesy permits.
Courtesy permits have been part of the
regulations since their inception in
1987, but in an effort to better allocate
APHIS resources, APHIS is proposing to
remove this regulatory feature. The
current regulations provide the ability
for APHIS to issue ‘‘courtesy permits,’’
in order to facilitate the movement of
organisms which are outside the scope
of these regulations, but whose
movement might otherwise be hindered
because of their similarity to organisms
regulated under these regulations. The
issuance of courtesy permits has
generated confusion in the public and
especially in the research community.
The application form for courtesy
permits is identical to the application
for other types of permits, and the
courtesy permit itself looks like other
permits. This has led to the widespread
misunderstanding by some researchers
that courtesy permits are actually
required for the movement of certain
organisms, or that issuance of a courtesy
permit removes the requirement for
applicants to have other authorizations
which may be required, under plant
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60022
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
pest regulations such as those found at
7 CFR part 330. APHIS commits
significant resources to the issuance of
these courtesy permits for the
movement of organisms which are not
subject to the provisions of part 340.
APHIS will work with researchers and
relevant government regulatory officials
to facilitate the transition.
APHIS will also be available for
consultation by persons who formerly
used courtesy permits and other persons
moving similar non-regulated articles, to
discuss how to facilitate their
movement. We also encourage the
public to comment on the proposed
elimination of courtesy permits and
how APHIS should work with persons
moving organisms for which we might
formerly have issued courtesy permits.
C. Conditional Exemptions From Permit
Requirement (§ 340.4)
The PPA allows the Secretary to
create ‘‘exceptions’’ to the permit
requirement when the Secretary deems
that a permit is not necessary. That is,
these regulated activities are allowed,
under certain conditions, without
seeking prior authorization via permit.
The current APHIS regulations contain
such PPA exceptions, but they are
referred to as ‘‘exemptions’’ in the
regulations. The current regulations
include conditional exemptions from
the requirement for interstate movement
permits. These conditional exemptions
were established in the regulations
during the first few years after the
regulations were first promulgated. The
last conditional exemption was
established in the regulations in 1990
for the interstate movement of GE plants
of the species Arabidopsis thaliana as
long as the conditions described in the
regulations are met.
In its proposed revision to the
regulations, APHIS is retaining the
existing conditional exemptions from
interstate movement. We are also
proposing a new regulatory procedure
that would enable APHIS to approve
new conditional exemptions more
efficiently than using the procedure of
notice and comment rulemaking for
each individual exemption. This can be
a transparent and efficient way to
provide regulatory relief. This new
procedure for approving conditional
exemptions is described in § 340.5, and
it incorporates transparent steps
including scientific review, public
input, and adaptability when APHIS
establishes the conditions relevant to
the specific conditional exemption.
Conditional exemptions, by their nature,
will always include conditions and
continued APHIS oversight to ensure
that the conditions are met.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
The current regulations provide for
conditional exemptions from the
requirement for permits for the
interstate movement of certain GE
strains of the microorganisms
Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, and Bacillus subtilis, and the
plant Arabidopsis thaliana in § 340.2(b),
and these conditional exemptions are
being retained under the proposed
regulations. Conditional exemptions
from permit have been part of the
regulations since the first exemption
was established in 1988 (for the
interstate movement of certain GE
microorganisms), with the addition of
another conditional exemption, through
rulemaking, in 1990 for certain types of
GE Arabidopsis thaliana, one of the
most commonly used plants for
scientific studies and which is
frequently distributed among
researchers. The essential conditions for
each of these conditional exemptions
address the following: (1) Species of the
GE organism, (2) the types of genetic
modifications that are allowed or
prohibited for the GE organism, and (3)
the manner in which the GE organism
is shipped interstate. The existing
conditional exemptions for the
interstate movement of microorganisms
were based on APHIS’ conclusion that
the exemption from the requirement for
permits for interstate movement of these
microorganisms would ‘‘not present a
risk of the introduction or dissemination
of a plant pest’’ (53 FR 12910, p.12910).
The existing conditional exemptions
for E. coli, Bacillus subtilis,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae and
Arabidopsis thaliana are being retained
in the proposed regulations. APHIS has
no information that would indicate that
such conditional exemption would be
result in the introduction and
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. The text of the conditional
exemption is being updated to place the
shipping requirements with the other
conditions associated with the
exemption, instead of the current
regulatory organization that has the
shipping requirements in a separate
section of the regulation.
In addition to the existing conditional
exemptions, APHIS is proposing a
transparent and efficient petition
procedure in § 340.5 whereby the
Administrator may approve additional
conditional exemptions from permit
without having to amend the
regulations. This procedure would
provide for a scientific review by APHIS
as well as the opportunity for public
review and comment on the scientific
basis for the proposed exemption and
the conditions associated with the
exemption. The proposed procedure
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
would provide an adaptable means of
ensuring that the regulatory oversight is
proportional to the risks posed by
specific activities with GE organisms.
Proposed § 340.5 describes the
procedure whereby a petitioner would
seek a determination by the
Administrator that the importation,
interstate movement, and/or release into
the environment of a GE organism is not
subject to the requirement to have a
permit under this part. We propose that
the Administrator’s decision to approve
an exemption would be based upon a
determination that the exemption from
the requirement for a permit, when
conducted with the associated
conditions, is unlikely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed. APHIS
anticipates that creating this new
petition procedure to allow approval of
additional conditional exemptions
would enhance its ability to customize
regulatory oversight to be proportional
to any risks associated with importation,
interstate movement, or release into the
environment of a GE organism.
Under the proposed procedure,
petitioners have the flexibility to
propose various types of conditional
exemptions from the requirement for a
permit: The proposal can be for one or
more permit types (importation,
interstate movement, or release into the
environment). In addition, the petitioner
can propose the relevant conditions.
The Administrator may approve the
proposed conditional exemption as
submitted in the petition, or the
Administrator may impose alternatives
to the requested exemption and
conditions. The Administrator would
review the scientific information and
evaluate potential risks relevant to the
proposal, then make the relevant
documents (proposal and any
supporting information) available to the
public for review and comment prior to
the Administrator’s decision.
The information needed for a petition
for conditional exemption would
depend on the nature of the exemption
requested and the proposed conditions
for exemption. For example, conditional
exemptions for the interstate movement
of narrowly-defined groups of organisms
with restrictive associated conditions
might require considerably less
information to justify than exemptions
for broadly defined groups of organisms
or less restrictive associated conditions.
In making its determination, APHIS
would consider all relevant information,
including information in the scientific
literature, copies of unpublished
studies, and reviews by other regulatory
agencies.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
APHIS foresees many advantages to
the proposed procedure, including
scientific rigor, public involvement, and
regulatory efficiency. APHIS would
continue to provide to the public the
relevant scientific information under
consideration, its environmental
analysis, and the rationale for its
determination. The public would also
retain its ability to provide comments to
the agency prior to a decision approving
a new exemption. APHIS decisions
regarding these newly approved
conditional exemptions would be
published in the Federal Register and
maintained on a list accessible to the
public.
In evaluating whether to approve a
new conditional exemption, APHIS
would carefully consider issues related
to enforceability of the conditional
exemption when proposing to approve a
conditional exemption. Unlike permit
conditions, which are binding on the
specific responsible person, the
conditions associated with the
exemption would apply to anyone who
conducts the activity under the
conditional exemption. Before granting
such a conditional exemption, APHIS
would take into consideration the
likelihood that such conditions would
be followed and the consequences if
they are not.
Conditional exemptions could be
used, for example, for the importation of
certain GE commodities. A person could
petition for an exemption from all
permits for shipments of a particular GE
commodity grain under the condition
that the grain is not grown, but will only
be moved for direct use as food, feed, or
for processing. The proposed procedure
to approve new exemptions would be
sufficiently adaptable that it can
consider approving exemptions for the
shipment of certain GE commodities
that would take into account any
conditions necessary to make it unlikely
to result in the introduction and
dissemination of plant pests or noxious
weeds.
APHIS considered proposing specific
criteria in the regulations that the
Agency would use when evaluating
potential risks of imported GE
commodities which are viable
propagules such as grains like corn,
wheat, etc. APHIS considered that such
a criterion-based system in the
regulations might allow APHIS to
conduct expedited reviews of imports
that met the specified criteria. APHIS
considered criteria such as whether the
GE plant had undergone a safety review
in a foreign country, whether APHIS
had granted nonregulated status to
something similar, and the likelihood
that the commodity could be propagated
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
(seeds, fruit with seeds, nonviable
products like flour, etc.).
However, at this time APHIS is not
proposing such criteria in the
regulation. APHIS does not rule out the
possibility of developing such a
criterion-based system in the future. We
welcome comments from the public on
this issue.
We are also proposing regulatory
procedures whereby the Administrator
may revoke any exemption under this
part after it is approved. As proposed,
the Administrator may revoke any
exemption if the Administrator receives
information subsequent to approving
the exemption and makes a
determination based upon this
information that the circumstances have
changed such that the exemption is
likely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. A revocation may not be
appealed. However, any person may file
a new petition in accordance with
§ 340.5 regarding the same or similar
organisms covered by the exemption if
new information relevant to the
revocation becomes available.
In addition to this procedure for
completely revoking an exemption so it
would be unavailable for use by any
person, we propose to add a provision
in paragraph (e) of the conditional
exemptions section, § 340.4, under
which the Administrator may revoke the
right of an individual person to use an
exemption without revoking the
exemption for other persons. The
Administrator could revoke an
individual’s right to use an exemption
after determining that the person or any
agent of the person has failed to comply
at any time with any provision of this
part.
D. Petitions for Nonregulated Status
(§ 340.5)
The current regulations include a
procedure by which anyone may
petition APHIS to grant ‘‘nonregulated
status’’ to a GE organism, which means
it would no longer be subject to the
regulations in part 340. This
nonregulated status is different from
that of regulated articles that might be
conditionally exempt from the
requirement for a permit when moved
interstate (following the conditions
specified in the regulations).
Published APHIS decisions made
under the current regulations have used
different ways to express the basic
standard ‘‘unlikely to pose a plant pest
risk’’ in determining whether to grant
nonregulated status to a specific GE
organism. In its determinations, APHIS
has conveyed the basic standard of
‘‘unlikely to pose a plant pest risk’’ by
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60023
concluding that the GE organism ‘‘poses
no more of a plant pest risk than its nongenetically engineered counterpart,’’
‘‘will not pose a plant pest risk’’; or that
there is ‘‘no plant pest risk,’’ or ‘‘no
direct or indirect plant pest effects.’’
Regardless of the phrases used in its
determination of nonregulated status to
date, APHIS has applied the same basic
evaluation criteria to each
determination to conclude that the GE
organism is unlikely to pose a plant pest
risk and therefore is not subject to the
part 340 regulations.
APHIS is proposing revisions to
§ 340.6 that will clarify the petition
procedure, information requirements for
petitions, and the standard upon which
the Administrator will make a
determination that a GE organism is
approved for nonregulated status. Under
the current regulations, the basic
standard for a determination of
nonregulated status of a GE organism
has been related to plant pest risk. In
§ 340.6(b)(4) of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to apply a similar basic
standard derived from the proposed
regulatory scope in § 340.0(a), namely,
whether the GE organism is unlikely to
be a plant pest or noxious weed.
The current regulations also have a
provision at § 340.6 to extend a
determination of nonregulated status
and grant nonregulated status to a GE
organism based on the similarity of the
GE organism to an antecedent GE
organism that has already granted
nonregulated status (§ 340.6(e)
‘‘Extensions to determinations of
nonregulated status’’). This provision
has been in the APHIS regulations since
1997 and has been used fifteen times to
grant nonregulated status to additional
GE plants based on similarity to their
antecedents. This existing ‘‘extension
procedure’’ was designed for APHIS to
take into account the previous
evaluation conducted by APHIS and
thereby afford the potential for
expedited evaluations of a petition for
extension. The extension procedure has
some administrative aspects which are
streamlined but in practice the APHIS
scientific reviews for extensions are
similar to those of the antecedent
organism.
Some members of the public have
misunderstood the nature of the
extension procedure, believing that
APHIS has not conducted a thorough
scientific review. Some members of the
public have misconstrued the term
‘‘extension’’ to conclude that an
extension would extend the duration of
nonregulated status (nonregulated status
is not granted with an expiration date).
For these reasons, APHIS is proposing
to eliminate the extension procedure in
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60024
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
the regulation. APHIS sees no advantage
to retaining the distinction in the
regulations between reviews for
antecedents and reviews for subsequent
petitions for extensions. Because the
proposed revisions for petition for
nonregulated status provide a high
degree of flexibility, a separate
extension procedure is not needed in
the regulation. Review of petitions
under the proposed regulations will rely
on previous evaluations of similar GE
organisms when they exist. APHIS
foresees that some evaluations for
nonregulated status may require less
time if previous evaluations have
addressed the issues relevant to a new
petition for nonregulated status.
In § 340.6 we propose some revisions
to the information that the
Administrator may require a petitioner
to submit in consideration of the
particular petition. In the current
regulation, the information needs are
described largely with respect to
evaluating GE plants, but APHIS
foresees that other GE organisms may
also be suitable candidates. This
provision may become more important
as new commercial applications of
biotechnology emerge and new types of
information are needed to properly
assess the risks associated with new
types of GE organisms. In all of the
nonregulated status requests processed
to date, the subject organisms and the
alterations involved did not present
unanticipated or completely novel
approaches and APHIS was able to
make a determination based on
information in the petitions. When
needed, APHIS obtained additional
information from petitioners, in a
consultation process similar to the one
proposed.
We are also proposing a regulatory
procedure whereby the Administrator
may revoke a previous approval of
nonregulated status. This is consistent
with the existing regulations and
policies that the Administrator may
place a deregulated GE organism back
under the regulations if the
Administrator concludes that the GE
organism poses a plant pest risk. As
proposed, the Administrator may revoke
any approval of nonregulated status if
the Administrator receives information
subsequent to approval that the GE
organism is likely to be a plant pest or
noxious weed. If the Administrator
revokes an approval for nonregulated
status, the Administrator may approve
for the same GE organism an exemption
from the requirement for permit in
accordance with § 340.5. The
revocation, its effective date, and the
reasons for it will be published in the
Federal Register. A revocation may not
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
be appealed. However, any person may
file a new petition in accordance with
§ 340.5 or § 340.6 regarding the same or
similar organisms covered by the
revocation if new information relevant
to the revocation becomes available.
Treatment of GE Organisms That Have
Been Granted Nonregulated Status
Although the APHIS evaluations of
GE plants that would be conducted
under the proposed regulatory changes
will evaluate some additional factors
because of consideration of noxious
weed risks, APHIS nonetheless
considers this proposed revision to be
sufficiently consistent with the criteria
evaluated in making determinations of
nonregulated status to date under the
current regulations. For this reason,
APHIS is proposing that all previous
determinations of nonregulated status
made since the early 1990s under the
part 340 regulations will be
automatically approved for
nonregulated status under the revisions
proposed here. The history of safe use
of these nonregulated GE plants in
agriculture in the United States and
other countries gives APHIS confidence
that it is appropriate to retain
nonregulated status under the revised
regulations for all those GE plants
which have been granted nonregulated
status under the existing regulations.
Many of these GE plants have been
incorporated into plant breeding
programs and been used to develop
hundreds of crop varieties that have
been widely and safely used in
agriculture around the world.
We also note that although the
addition of the term ‘‘noxious weed’’ is
new to the proposed regulation,
previous evaluations for determinations
of nonregulated status considered the
concept of plant pest risk in a broad
context that included consideration of
potential weediness. The evaluations
considered, inter alia, whether the
unmodified plant was a weed, whether
the GE plant was a weed, and whether
the interbreeding of the GE plant with
sexually compatible plant species
would result in offspring that would be
weeds. In each case in which APHIS
granted nonregulated status to date,
APHIS reached the conclusion that in
each instance that the potential for
weediness was unlikely to occur. In the
case of some petitions for nonregulated
status in which the GE plants were
engineered with sequences derived from
plant viruses, APHIS also considered in
its reviews whether the genetic
modification was unlikely to result in a
new plant pest, in this case a plant virus
(through mechanisms such as
recombination or transencapsidation).
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
E. Compliance, Enforcement, and
Remedial Action (§ 340.7)
1. Ensuring Compliance With Permits
and Exemption Activities
In recent years, APHIS has
strengthened its program in order to
improve permit holders’ compliance
with the regulations, to augment the
approaches used to prevent or remediate
potential risks to plant health, and to
utilize appropriate enforcement
strategies. This proposal provides an
opportunity to set forth the compliance
and enforcement requirements and the
tools and administrative practices
APHIS may employ as part of an
integrated approach to prevent the
introduction or dissemination of plant
pests and noxious weeds, and to
support overall administration of the
program. These matters are addressed in
proposed § 340.7, ‘‘Compliance,
enforcement, and remedial actions.’’
These proposed regulatory changes also
reflect certain provisions of the 2008
Farm Bill and align with
recommendations of USDA’s OIG.
APHIS seeks to clarify that it will use
the full range of enforcement authorities
and penalties granted under the PPA. As
described above, APHIS issues permits
with specific conditions or requirements
placed upon the responsible person.
Proposed § 340.7 clarifies the
requirement for compliance with these
conditions, as well as the approaches
available to APHIS to verify compliance.
Such conditions may include
requirements for the responsible person
to establish and maintain records
related to the permit, as well as allowing
APHIS to review those records. This
section underscores APHIS’ ability to
conduct inspections and audit records
related to the regulated activities.
In this proposed rule, the
requirements for record retention are
being increased. Records indicating that
a GE organism that was imported or
moved interstate reached its intended
destination must be retained for at least
2 years after completion of importation
or interstate movement, and all other
records must be retained for at least 5
years after completion of all obligations
required under a relevant permit or
exemption. APHIS is also proposing
changes to the nature of the records that
are required, a topic discussed in greater
detail in section E of this document, ‘‘E.
Paperwork Reduction Act.’’ Changes
include a requirement to maintain
records for activities done under a
conditional exemption, as well as
contracts and other information related
to agreements between the responsible
person and all agents that conduct
activities subject to this part.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
In a previous section of this proposal
we discussed the types of records
proposed as core permit conditions in
§ 340.3. We also propose to add certain
recordkeeping requirements to § 340.7
that would apply not just to responsible
persons exercising permits, but to all
responsible persons and their agents
engaged in the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment of any GE organism that is
subject to this part, including persons
utilizing the conditional exemptions
from permits.
In recent years, APHIS has accrued a
great deal of experience in enforcing the
regulations and investigating possible
violations of them. This experience has
helped us identify specific types of
records that may not be required by the
current regulations, but that are
necessary for effective enforcement of
the proposed regulations.2 For example,
in investigations of field trials we have
found that we could not always obtain
detailed maps for each planting area
used during each season of the trial.
This information is important for the
efficient enforcement of the regulations.
We also found that sometimes records of
actual field trial operations over time
were not sufficient to confirm that the
procedures, equipment, and safeguards
APHIS approved for a field trial were
actually employed. That is, while
existing records could generally confirm
plans to use, for example, certain
cleaning equipment or procedures at
certain intervals, or to conduct plantings
on certain dates, the records did not
confirm that plans were actually carried
out on the approved dates. We also
found that records for some field trials
did not identify which staff members or
contractors were responsible for
performing which duties, either during
a field test or in the event of an
unauthorized release that triggered the
field test contingency plan. When
responsibilities cannot be linked to
specific individuals, it makes it very
difficult to investigate possible
violations. Another gap in necessary
records we discovered through
experience was the absence of clear
written records of the responsibilities of
different organizations, when several
different entities were involved in a
field trial. During investigations we may
2 Details of investigations that have led APHIS to
propose expanded records requirements may be
found in the ‘‘Lessons Learned’’ document cited
above, and in investigation report documents on the
APHIS Web site, e.g., ‘‘2007 Report of LibertyLink
Rice Incidents’’ (https://www.aphis.usda.gov/
newsroom/content/2007/10/content/printable/
RiceReport10-2007.pdf) and ‘‘Transcript of
Technical Briefing on Rice Investigation’’ (https://
www.usda.gov/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_1OB
?contentidonly=true&contentid=2007/10/0285.xml).
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
need to review not only any written
contracts, but also any written
agreements among researchers,
developers, or other parties that are
sharing performance of tasks required
by the permit for a field trial.
The proposed regulations would
allow APHIS to require these types of
records. As APHIS considered the types
of records needed to support the
regulations it became apparent that
regulations could not specify in a ‘‘one
size fits all’’ fashion all record
requirements that might be needed.
Therefore, we propose to add those
detailed record requirements of truly
general applicability in § 340.3 and
§ 340.7. However, we also propose in
§ 340.3 that we would continue to
impose any necessary additional record
requirements appropriate to each permit
situation as individual permit
conditions.
Proposed § 340.7 also outlines the
possible consequences of failure to
comply with the regulations, including
denial of future permits; revocation of
current permits; destruction, treatment,
and removal of GE organisms; issuance
of penalties; and a means to settle
alleged civil violations prior to the
issuance of an administrative complaint.
Under this proposal, every person
whose activities are within the scope of
the regulations must comply with all the
requirements of this part. Moreover, a
responsible person can be held liable for
the violation of any requirement of this
part by any agent working for the
responsible person (including persons
contracted to conduct or carry out the
environmental release on their own or
on leased properties).
We propose to address remediation
authority and procedures to a greater
degree of detail than the current
regulations. In proposed §§ 340.7(e) and
(g) we explicitly state that the APHIS
Administrator has the authority to take
remedial actions in the event that an
incident requires such actions. We also
specify that the APHIS Administrator
has the authority to order remedial
action by others. These orders could
take the form of an Administrative
Order, Emergency Action Notification,
or similar regulatory instrument.
Additional information about these
types of orders and related procedures
are provided in administrative guidance
on the APHIS Web site. The
consequence for failure to abide by the
orders of the Administrator is also
described in proposed § 340.7, linking
remediation to enforcement.
Finally, APHIS has clarified in the
proposed regulations that in the event of
a permit revocation, it may act or order
action of the responsible person in the
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60025
handling of the organisms, articles, or
means of conveyances.
2. Low Level Presence of Regulated GE
Plants in Seed or Grain
On March 29, 2007, APHIS published
a Federal Register notice titled ‘‘Policy
on Responding to the Low-Level
Presence of Regulated Genetically
Engineered Plant Materials’’ (72 FR
14649–14651; Docket No. APHIS–2006–
0167. This notice described how APHIS
responds when low levels of regulated
GE plant materials occur in commercial
seeds or grain that may be used for food
or feed. This issue was also addressed
in the DEIS in Issue 7. Both of these
documents described how APHIS has
addressed these occurrences in the past,
and how the Agency intends to address
them in the future. We are proposing to
amend the current regulations to
explicitly incorporate APHIS’ low level
presence policy.
As described in the DEIS, APHIS
proposes to establish criteria under
which the occurrence of a low level
presence (LLP) of GE plant materials in
seeds or grain may not be cause for
agency remedial action. APHIS would
still retain discretion to order corrective
or remedial actions in situations that
meet the non-actionable criteria, when
the Administrator determines remedial
action is needed to make the LLP
unlikely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. We propose to list criteria and
describe possible enforcement actions in
the regulations to improve transparency
regarding how APHIS would respond to
LLP in most instances. APHIS will not
predetermine a specific level that is
considered non-actionable as far as
taking some remedial and/or
enforcement action because this
determination should always be made
case-by-case. These criteria are intended
to apply only to APHIS’ decision to take
or order remedial action in the event
that LLP occurs. The proposed criteria
are listed within the section describing
the Administrator’s ability to take or
order remedial actions. Regardless of
whether APHIS considers the LLP
actionable with regard to remediation,
any violations of the regulations or
permit conditions could still result in
any of the compliance and enforcement
actions listed in the regulations,
including imposing civil penalties.
APHIS is proposing a new provision
in the regulations that would reflect the
current policy cited above. The
provision describes the criteria APHIS
will use when determining that a LLP
event would be non-actionable with
regard to remediation, namely when the
criteria support a conclusion that the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60026
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
LLP is unlikely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed. Because the
criteria are safety-based, they will be
used for incidents of low level presence
originating domestically (e.g., from field
testing) as well as any low level
presence that might be detected in
import shipments that may contain
organisms subject to regulation.
APHIS also considered two additional
criteria, which we have not adopted in
the proposed rule. First, we considered
a criterion that would require that the
genetic material be introduced into the
plant using a method that has been
demonstrated to result in integration of
the new sequences into the plant
genome, as defined in § 340.1. We did
not include this criterion in our
proposal because its relevance in the
LLP context is unclear. A second
criterion considered was that the genetic
material engineered into the GE plant
does not encode substances with whose
function APHIS is unfamiliar. APHIS
did not adopt this criterion since it is
redundant with the proposed criteria
that will be used, i.e., that the function
of the introduced genetic sequences is
known and that key food safety issues
have been addressed.
The DEIS, in Issue 7, Alternative 3,
proposed that APHIS would also
consider the LLP safety criteria when
deciding whether to issue a permit for
environmental release, and what type
and severity of permit conditions to
assign to the release permit. In its
evaluation of permit applications,
APHIS does plan to refer to the LLP
criteria, as described above.
F. Administrative Changes
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
1. Confidential Business Information
APHIS is proposing a new § 340.8 to
provide further guidance on the manner
in which confidential business
information (CBI) will be addressed in
the implementation of these regulations.
This change will support the overall
administration of the program. The
proposed § 340.8 cites the relevance of
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
and exemptions from releasing
information pursuant to FOIA, namely,
5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), and states that APHIS
may exempt from disclosure to the
public trade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a
person that are privileged or
confidential. Proposed § 340.8 also
states how persons wishing to protect
confidential business information
should communicate with APHIS in
permit applications, petitions, or other
submissions to APHIS.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
2. Time Frames for APHIS Action on
Permit Applications and Petitions
Current regulations specify time
frames within which APHIS must take
certain actions, such as issuing permits,
acknowledging notifications or issuing
decisions on petitions to grant
nonregulated status. APHIS experience
in the last several years has shown that
the time required to complete these
actions has increased beyond the time
frames originally stipulated in the
regulations in 1987 (permits) and 1993
(petitions for nonregulated status). As
stated in the current regulation, APHIS
is obligated to give its reply in the
stipulated time, even if required
procedures are not yet complete.
Therefore, APHIS proposes to include in
§ 340.2(d) of the regulations a statement
that APHIS will generally respond in
the time frames indicated. APHIS
believes it is important to continue to
meet the indicated time frames
whenever possible, but the most
important thing is to communicate the
actual status of reviews and procedures
with applicants rather than be obligated
to reach a decision in a certain number
of days despite the complexities
involved with a review. APHIS is
particularly seeking comment on this
proposed change from persons with
experience under the current time
frames.
3. Duration Period for Permits
Under the current regulations,
notifications for environmental release
and interstate movement are valid for
one year, and the duration period for a
permit issued for an environmental
release is not specified. Currently
interstate movement permits are only
valid for one year from the date of
issuance, and a new import permit must
be obtained for each imported shipment.
APHIS will continue to retain the
flexibility of the permitting procedure to
authorize environmental release permits
that can be effective for any appropriate
time period. In some cases, it may be
most efficient to authorize
environmental release permits that are
valid for more than a single year. In
such cases, APHIS can retain adequate
oversight by performing periodic
inspections and requiring periodic
reports. Experience has revealed
situations where field tests lasting more
than one year are essential. For
example, some environmental releases
of GE fruit trees may take several years
to evaluate the fruit production that
often does not begin for several years
after planting.
In order to provide greater flexibility
and efficiency, APHIS is also proposing
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
to eliminate the current restrictions in
the regulation on the duration of
permits for interstate movement and
importation. The proposed regulations
will remove the requirements that
interstate movement permits are only
valid for one year from the date of
issuance, and that importation permits
must be obtained for each individual
importation. These changes should give
APHIS the flexibility to issue these
permits with suitable durations to meet
the individual circumstances.
G. Definitions and Miscellaneous
Changes
APHIS proposes to change certain
definitions in § 340.1 of the regulations,
to add certain new definitions, and to
remove definitions for terms that are
defined in the PPA or that no longer
appear in the regulations.
Revised Definitions
APHIS proposes to change the
definitions of the following terms in
§ 340.1:
Release into the environment would
read ‘‘Dispersal beyond the constraints
of a contained facility or secure
shipment. Synonymous with the term
environmental release.’’
Secure shipment is a new term
defined below. By adding reference to
secure shipment in this definition, we
clarify the distinction between
environmental release and shipments
for importation and interstate
movement; any such movements which
are not done by secure shipment
constitute an environmental release.
Responsible person would read ‘‘The
person who has control and will
maintain control over a GE organism
during its importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment and assures compliance
with all conditions contained in any
applicable permit or exemption as well
as other requirements in this part. A
responsible person shall be at least 18
years of age and be a legal resident of
the United States or designate an agent
who is at least 18 years of age and a
legal resident of the United States.’’ The
change from the former definition is the
addition of ‘‘at least 18 years of age,’’
added to prevent possible enforcement
difficulties.
New Definitions
APHIS proposes to add definitions of
the following new terms:
Confidential business information,
CBI would read ‘‘Information such as
trade secrets or commercial or financial
information that may be exempt from
disclosure under Exemption 4 of the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
because disclosure could reasonably be
expected to cause substantial
competitive harm. USDA regulations on
how the agency will handle CBI and
how to determine what information may
be exempt from disclosure under FOIA
(5 U.S.C. 552) are found at 7 CFR
§ 1.12.’’ We propose to add this
definition because APHIS has often
been asked to clarify what is and is not
CBI, and how it is handled. The
definition describes typical types of CBI,
and the language in proposed § 340.8
describes how persons submitting
documents to APHIS can request that
identified information be treated as CBI.
There is also additional guidance on CBI
contained in administrative guidance on
the APHIS Web site regarding document
preparation for part 340 requests.
However, it is important to realize that
in actual situations where someone
submits a FOIA request for particular
information, the APHIS FOIA Officer
makes the ultimate determination as to
whether particular information shall be
released, in accordance with the
standards of FOIA, Executive Order
12600, and 7 CFR 1.12.
Contingency plan would read ‘‘A
written plan stating how the responsible
person will respond in the event of the
unauthorized environmental release of
GE organisms.’’ We propose to define
this new term to describe a document
mentioned in both the permit
application information requirements
section (§ 340.2(c)) and the permit
conditions section (§ 340.3).
Exempt, exempted, exemption would
read ‘‘A determination by the
Administrator that the importation,
interstate movement, and/or release into
the environment of an organism or class
of organisms described in § 340.0(a) is
not subject to the requirement to have
a permit under this part. An exemption
from one type of permit (e.g., interstate
movement) does not remove remaining
obligations to obtain other permits
under this part.’’ We propose to add this
definition for the term exemption to
refer to situations where a regulated
movement is exempt from the
requirement for a permit. The proposed
definition is based on language in Sec.
411(b)(1) of the PPA (7 U.S.C. 7711(c)),
titled ‘‘Exception to permit
requirement,’’ which authorizes the
Secretary to issue regulations to allow
the movement of specified plant pests
without further restriction if the
Secretary finds that a permit is not
necessary.
Noxious weed would read ‘‘Any plant
or plant product that can directly or
indirectly injure or cause damage to
crops (including nursery stock or plant
products), livestock, poultry, or other
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
interests of agriculture, irrigation,
navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the
environment.’’ This is the definition for
noxious weed found in the PPA.
Recipient organism would read ‘‘The
organism that will receive the genetic
material from a donor organism in the
process of genetic engineering (once the
organism is engineered it is referred to
as the genetically engineered (GE)
organism).’’ This definition is needed to
properly distinguish organisms and
their traits in comparisons of GE
organisms to the same organisms prior
to transformation.
State or tribal regulatory official
would read ‘‘State or tribal official with
responsibilities for plant health, or any
other duly designated State or tribal
official, in the State or on the tribal
lands where the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment is to take place.’’ This term
is used in reference to consultations
with States and tribes under the
regulations.
Secure shipment would read
‘‘Shipment in a container or a means of
conveyance of sufficient strength and
integrity to withstand leakage of
contents, shocks, pressure changes, and
other conditions incident to ordinary
handling in transportation.’’
We propose to add the following two
definitions to make it clear that, when
the Administrator authorizes it, a
signature required under the regulations
may be an electronic signature and a
written document required under the
regulations (e.g., a permit application)
may be an electronic document.
Signature, signed would read ‘‘The
discrete, verifiable symbol of an
individual which, when affixed to a
writing with the knowledge and consent
of the individual, indicates a present
intention to authenticate the writing.
This includes electronic signatures
when authorized by the Administrator.’’
Write, writing, written would read
‘‘Any document or communication
required by this part to be in writing
may also be provided by electronic
communication when authorized by the
Administrator.’’
Deletion of Definitions
We propose to remove the following
definitions from the regulations:
courtesy permit, expression vector,
introduce or introduction, regulated
article, stably integrated, vector or
vector agent, and well-characterized and
contains only non-coding regulatory
regions.
These definitions would be removed
because the terms would no longer be
used in the regulations. We propose to
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60027
eliminate the term regulated article
partly because the use of the term
‘‘article’’ in current part 340 is not
consistent with usage in the PPA, which
uses the term article to mean ‘‘any
material or tangible object that could
harbor plant pests or noxious weeds’’—
that is, things like packing materials,
shipping containers, commodities,
etc.—and not a plant pest or noxious
weed itself. Under the current
regulation, however, regulated article
refers exclusively to certain GE
organisms. Furthermore, under both the
PPA and part 340, ‘‘articles’’ are not
regulated, but rather their importation,
interstate movement or environmental
release is regulated. For these reasons,
the term ‘‘regulated article’’ in the
current regulations is both inconsistent
with the terminology of the PPA and
difficult for the public to comprehend.
We also propose to remove the
definition for introduction. APHIS
currently uses the term in part 340 to
denote certain kinds of activities that
fall within the scope of the regulation,
namely importation, interstate
movement, and release into the
environment. The PPA, however, does
not specifically define the term
introduction. Therefore, to avoid
confusion, instead of using the term
introduction to define the different
types of regulated activities, APHIS will
instead refer to these specific activities
themselves in the regulations, namely,
the importation, interstate movement
and release into the environment.
Miscellaneous Changes
We also propose to make minor
miscellaneous changes to the
regulations to improve their clarity and
remove redundancies. For example, in
addition to adding the definition for CBI
discussed above, we are consolidating
requirements concerning CBI, formerly
contained in several sections of the
regulations, into proposed § 340.8.
IV. Required Analyses
A. National Environmental Policy Act
On January 23, 2004 (69 FR 3271),
APHIS published a notice of intent to
prepare a draft environmental impact
statement (DEIS) in accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act in
connection with the regulations at 7
CFR part 340 and potential changes to
those regulations. This notice identified
potential issues and alternatives to be
studied and requested public comment
to shape the scope of the DEIS.
On July 17, 2007, APHIS published
the DEIS evaluating regulatory
alternatives under consideration and
solicited public comment on the DEIS
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60028
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(72 FR 39021–39025). The
Environmental Protection Agency
published a separate notice on July 13,
2007, soliciting public comment on the
DEIS (72 FR 38576–38577). The notices
sought comments on the quality of our
analysis of potential environmental
effects of the alternatives under
consideration, and also sought views on
how each alternative would affect areas
such as the overall effectiveness of our
biotechnology program, its operational
efficiency, industry compliance issues,
or other issues that would be associated
with the implementation of an
alternative.
The major elements of this proposed
rule were accurately described in the
alternatives contained in the DEIS and
their potential environmental effects
were analyzed in the DEIS. Table 4
below provides a comparison between
the proposed changes to part 340 and
the DEIS. We received numerous
comments on the DEIS, which will be
discussed fully when we publish a final
environmental impact statement (FEIS).
The DEIS and the comments on it were
used by APHIS to inform decision
makers and aid the design of this
proposal. Information from the DEIS
comments, along with information from
many other sources, including certain
provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill and
recommendations from USDA’s OIG,
was used to inform the drafters of this
proposed rule about the issues
perceived to be involved in and
addressed by the rulemaking. We will
respond to all DEIS comments in detail
in the FEIS since the agency action
(revising the regulations in part 340) is
still subject to change based on
comments and information received on
this proposed rule, and thus we cannot
provide definitive and final comment
responses until we issue the FEIS and
the final rule.
Consideration of the DEIS comments
led APHIS to refine and reorganize some
of the regulatory alternatives it
considered. Therefore, the presentation
and discussion of the alternatives
proposed in this proposal do not exactly
match those described in the DEIS. The
differences are primarily a matter of
reorganizing and realigning some
material and their corresponding
regulatory alternatives, using more
descriptive terms in some criteria listed
in the alternatives, and choosing
between regulatory alternatives that fall
within the analysis of the DEIS.
Accordingly, the DEIS is still consistent
and applicable as an analysis of the
potential environmental effects of the
proposed action. However, we are
interested in receiving comments on
whether any of the proposed regulatory
alternatives in this document do not
appear to have been adequately
addressed within the DEIS.
TABLE 4—SUMMARY OF PROPOSED CHANGES TO THE REGULATIONS AND RELATIONSHIP TO DEIS
Summary of proposed substantive changes to the regulation
DEIS issue
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Redescription of which GE organisms are subject to the regulations.
1
Deletion of the list of plant pest taxa in the regulations and the petition procedure to amend the
list.
Clarification that APHIS has the authority to regulate nonliving materials through permit conditions in cases where such materials may pose a risk as a noxious weed.
Revision of the application information requirements and permit conditions for all permit types.
Elimination of the current notification procedure for importation, interstate movement, and release into the environment of certain types of GE plants (permitting procedure will be used instead).
Revision of the permitting system for environmental releases:
• Subdivision into 5 categories of permits for environmental releases (4 for GE plants, 1 for
other GE organisms).
• Continue strict permit conditions for environmental releases of GE plants engineered to
produce compounds intended for pharmaceutical or industrial uses.
Continued use of permits with appropriate conditions for single or multiple year releases.
Creation of new administrative procedures in permitting: (1) The explicit agreement of the responsible person to comply with regulatory requirements of the permit, (2) amendment of existing permit conditions, (3) transfer of permits to a different responsible person, and (4) revocation of a permit.
Elimination of the prescribed shipping container provisions in favor of a performance based approach specified as permit conditions for importation and interstate movement.
Revision of the existing conditional exemptions for interstate movement such that the shipping
standard is part of the exemption. Addition of a recordkeeping requirement for persons using
the existing conditional exemptions.
Elimination of the option for APHIS to issue courtesy permits for importation, interstate movement, and environmental release of GE organisms which are not subject to the regulation.
Creation of a petition procedure for the Administrator to approve additional conditional exemptions from the requirement for a permit. This also includes a description of administrative
steps if Administrator revokes an exemption, amends the conditions of an exemption, or prohibits a person from using a conditional exemption.
Clarification and revision of the existing petition procedure for determining nonregulated status,
including elimination of the procedure to extend a previous determination of nonregulated status, and a description of the administrative steps if Administrator revokes nonregulated status.
Clarification of the actions the Administrator may take related to compliance, enforcement, and
remediation.
Clarification of APHIS approach to the low level presence of regulated GE plants in seed or
grain.
Definition of Confidential Business Information (CBI) and description of administrative practices
for CBI.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
DEIS alternative
Sfmt 4702
2 (DEIS preferred alternative)
or 3.
5
2 (DEIS preferred alternative).
2
4 (DEIS preferred alternative).
2
4
4 (DEIS preferred alternative).
2 (DEIS preferred alternative).
6
1 (No action alternative).
10
2 (DEIS preferred alternative).
3
8
2 (DEIS preferred alternative).
1 (DEIS No Action alternative).
7
3 (DEIS preferred alternative).
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
We received approximately 23,000
comments on the DEIS, of which more
than 22,000 were variations of several
form letters. There were also several
lengthy and detailed evaluations of
environmental, scientific, legal, cultural,
and economic issues raised by the DEIS.
APHIS took all comments related to
regulatory changes under consideration
as we developed the content of this
proposed rule, and altered a number of
preliminary ideas for the proposal based
on comments. We will fully summarize
and address the comments received on
the DEIS in a Final Environmental
Impact Statement to be prepared in
conjunction with the publication of a
final rule. In addition to specific DEIS
issues that were discussed above in the
Preamble, the following section
summarizes and discusses those
comments on the DEIS that were most
directly related to the regulatory
alternatives discussed in this proposed
rule and the ways in which these
comments affected development of the
proposal.
Many DEIS commenters addressed
how the regulations should use the PPA
authorities regarding noxious weeds,
plant pests, and biological control
organisms. Most comments on the DEIS
that addressed this issue stated that
APHIS should expand the scope of its
regulatory program beyond plant pests
to include both noxious weeds and
certain biological control organisms,
consistent with all of the regulatory
authorities of the PPA. The following
opinions were expressed regarding PPA
authority regarding noxious weeds and
the meaning of the PPA definition of
noxious weed.
Very few commenters suggested that
APHIS biotechnology regulations
should implement the PPA’s noxious
weed definition in its broadest possible
sense. One commenter suggested that
APHIS broadly interpret the phrase
‘‘other interests of agriculture,’’ in the
PPA definition of noxious weed such
that APHIS would consider a plant to be
a noxious weed if it poses solely
economic harm, i.e., in the absence of
physical harm. As explained previously
in this proposal, such an interpretation
is not consistent with the PPA, nor with
the manner in which APHIS–PPQ has
implemented the noxious weed program
pursuant to the PPA. Many commenters
suggested that APHIS needed clear
regulations or policies to describe how
it will be evaluating whether GE plants
pose threats as noxious weeds. APHIS
agrees and has framed this proposal to
clarify the issue for the public.
Some commenters stated that APHIS
should acknowledge limits to its
consideration of potential damage to
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
public health in APHIS regulations, and
the noxious weed definition should not
be interpreted so broadly as to provide
APHIS with the legal responsibility or
authority to determine the food safety of
GE crops or to prevent GE crops from
entering the food supply. The
commenters stated that Congress clearly
intended the FDA to be responsible in
this area.
We agree, and this proposal
acknowledges FDA authority in the food
safety area. However, it is important that
the regulatory procedures in each
agency dovetail and support each other
where agency mission areas come in
contact. This proposal recognizes this
need for mutual agency support. When
a permit for environmental release,
importation, or interstate movement of a
new GE organism is submitted to
APHIS, we would evaluate whether
there are any signs that the
environmental release, importation, or
interstate movement of the organism
could present risks to the public health.
If APHIS is concerned that there may be
food safety risks associated with the GE
organism, we would contact FDA. The
decision on whether or how to regulate
food and feed from the GE organism to
address food and feed safety risks would
then be FDA’s. On the other hand, it is
also likely that existing food safety
evaluations will prove to be useful and
relevant to APHIS evaluations of a GE
organism. Food safety concerns are one
of several factors APHIS would take into
account when considering, for example,
what types of permit conditions are
needed for the environmental release of
a GE organism, or whether activities
associated with the organism should
qualify for an exemption from the
permit requirement.
Several commenters stated that under
the current regulations APHIS has
always considered noxious weed risk, or
at least ‘‘weediness.’’ We agree that in
practice, when APHIS assesses a GE
plant it has always evaluated the
potential weediness of the GE plant in
relation to its plant pest potential. In the
context of the PPA, ‘‘weediness’’ is more
properly a noxious weed risk
characteristic than a plant pest one, and
the proposed revision of the regulations
will more clearly align the regulations
with the plant pest and noxious weed
risk pursuant to the PPA. Current
APHIS regulations and guidance
directly address the importance of
including weediness when evaluating
risks associated with GE organisms. For
example, when the petition procedure
to grant nonregulated status was added
to part 340 in 1993, the traits APHIS
listed for evaluation explicitly included
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60029
‘‘weediness of the regulated article’’ (see
current § 340.6(c)(4)).
Several DEIS commenters addressed
what characteristics should trigger
regulation of a GE organism, or put
another way, how to set the scope of
organisms subject to regulation. In the
DEIS, APHIS explored many options
including continuing to make its
decisions primarily based upon the
transformation event (also sometimes
referred to as the individual transformed
line, transgenic line or GE line). Some
members of the public refer to this as an
event-by-event approach. It is
sometimes contrasted with a ‘‘traitbased’’ approach that focuses more on
the resulting trait or phenotype of the
GE organism. In a trait-based approach,
a regulatory decision for an organism
engineered for one phenotype would
apply equally to other GE organisms if
they had the same phenotype or trait,
regardless of whether they were
engineered with the same genes. APHIS
invited comment on the relative merits
of the event-by-event approach and the
trait-based approach. The current
regulations do not limit APHIS to one
approach or the other. Many readers
equated ‘‘event-by-event’’ with a
‘‘process-based’’ system and likewise
equated ‘‘trait-based’’ regulation with a
‘‘product-based’’ system. Thus many
comments focused on the relative merits
of a product-based system versus a
process-based system.
Some suggested that the trigger be
‘‘process-based’’, i.e., the process of
modifying the organism by recombinant
DNA techniques would be the
determinant. Others suggested the
trigger be ‘‘product-based’’, i.e., the
nature of the resulting product
(organism) would be the determinant for
whether the organism would be subject
to the regulation. Many of the comments
were not actually related to the basis for
the trigger, but rather to the focus of the
risk assessment, with most stating that
the risk assessments should be based on
the biology of the organism (productbased), not the technique by which it
was made (process-based). One
commenter believes that the process of
genetic engineering is a useful trigger,
but once regulated, the characteristics of
the GE organism should dominate
APHIS considerations of safety.
Those supporting a process-based
approach for identifying which
organisms should be subject to
regulation stated that each GE organism
can have unintended as well as
intended changes, and that these
unintended changes to the organism
would require that each individual
resulting from genetic engineering must
be assessed on a case-by-case basis.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60030
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Some commenters also suggested that
this approach of APHIS assessment of
each individual GE organism better
protects the environment and human
health than an approach that focuses
primarily on the trait(s) of the GE
organism.
Some commenters against processbased approach stated that this
approach is illogical, on the one hand,
to regulate a plant species with no
known risks only because GE
techniques were used to modify it,
whereas on the other hand the same
plant species modified by other
techniques faces no additional
regulatory requirements from APHIS.
Those supporting a product-based
regulatory approach stated that it would
be aligned with the preponderance of
scientific opinion on the issue, that the
characteristics of the organism should
take precedence over the technique of
genetic modification in the APHIS
assessment of the organism. APHIS
agrees that any evaluation of risk should
be based on the biology of the product.
Several commenters suggested that
the definition of regulated article would
have to be reexamined and possibly
redefined to reflect changes in the PPA.
Commenters also stated that the term
regulated article was problematic
whether linked to specific taxa in
§ 340.2, under the current regulations,
or linked to plants produced by
particular technologies. These
commenters emphasized that actions
under the regulations usually amount to
an investigation of whether an article
(GE organism) needs to be regulated,
and that predefining the subject of the
investigation as a regulated article
strongly implies that a decision has
been made to require some regulatory
oversight.
The proposed elimination of the term
‘‘regulated article’’ would facilitate a
clearer understanding that it is not the
GE organism that is regulated, but rather
the importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of the GE
organism.
APHIS determined that eliminating
‘‘introduction’’ as a defined term would
facilitate clearer understanding that the
activities subject to the regulations are
in fact importation, interstate
movement, and release into the
environment.
In the DEIS, APHIS discussed the
need to regulate nonliving products of
GE organisms. The preferred alternative
was to have a procedure to regulate nonviable material only in certain rare
circumstances when it might pose a
risk. Most of the DEIS comments
addressing this issue agreed that APHIS
should regulate nonviable GE plant
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
material only in certain circumstances,
based on the risks posed. The few
comments that provided greater detail
identified toxicity risks and possible
persistence in the environment of toxic
nonviable plant parts or debris as the
most significant risk associated with
nonliving GE products. A few
commenters also stated that adding a
clear definition of ‘‘nonliving’’ or
‘‘nonviable’’ would aid the regulations.
APHIS has responded to these
comments in this proposal by not
usually regulating nonliving GE
products, and by providing that when
any control is needed over such a
product that is associated with a living
GE organism which is covered by a
permit, due to toxicity or other risks,
such controls would be included as
permit conditions in permits issued for
the associated living GE organism. We
propose to provide for this by adding
the following sentence to paragraph (b)
of § 340.3, Permit conditions: ‘‘The
Administrator may also assign permit
conditions addressing nonliving
materials associated with or derived
from GE plants when such conditions
are needed to make it unlikely that the
nonliving materials would pose a
noxious weed risk.’’
We received one DEIS comment
directly addressing the issuance of
courtesy permits. This comment
supported retaining use of courtesy
permits, and stated that courtesy
permits facilitate the importation of GE
Drosophila melanogaster strains by the
research community and also ease the
workload for APHIS. The continued
issuance of courtesy permits diverts
Agency resources unnecessarily from
organisms that are within the scope of
the regulations. We intend to help
develop informational materials for the
research community and other agencies
that are aware of courtesy permits to
clarify that such permits are not
required, and to explain this to any
persons who contact us requesting
courtesy permits in the future.
Several DEIS comments addressed the
notification procedure and supported
eliminating it. Some comments
suggested that the types of organisms
formerly eligible for the notification
process should instead be handled
through a two-tiered permitting process,
with experimental permits for field
trials and commercial permits for GE
crops that are to be sold in commerce.
Other comments suggested that while
some organisms might require permits
with minimal conditions rather than
notifications, others with even lower
risks could be exempted from permit
requirements. These latter comments
also generally suggested that some of the
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
criteria in the current regulations used
to determine eligibility for the
notification process could be preserved
in the new regulations as criteria to
identify organisms that should be
exempted from the requirement for a
permit. One commenter stated that since
the current ‘‘notification’’ process
involves acknowledgment by APHIS
and conditions as well as notification,
changing to a system of low risk permits
would be a de facto acknowledgment of
the current process. To address these
issues, APHIS is proposing to eliminate
notifications and to handle regulated GE
organisms that previously would have
been eligible for notifications through a
permitting procedure.
We received a few comments on the
DEIS generally related to procedures for
reviewing permit applications.
Comments stated that the role of States
in reviewing or approving permit
applications for GE crops has been very
important and useful under the current
regulations, and should continue in
future regulations. Comments also
stated the importance of scientific
integrity in the review process, and
emphasized the importance of
coordinating with other agencies
(particularly FDA and EPA review)
when issues within their mission area
arise during APHIS review of
applications.
The proposed changes to the permit
application procedure address these
concerns. States would have a
continuing role in application review
that is very similar to their existing role,
and we have been increasing
interactions with the relevant tribal
authorities in recent years.
Several comments were peripherally
related to the DEIS issue of whether
APHIS should establish standard or
general permit conditions or what they
should require. These comments
emphasized that the purpose of permit
conditions is to control risks not
otherwise controlled, and that permit
conditions must be developed in
response to careful consideration of the
risks presented by the particular
permitted activity. One comment stated
that APHIS should not require permit
conditions that have the primary
purpose of preventing crops from
entering the food supply, because
APHIS does not have the legal authority
or scientific expertise to set them.
We have taken these views into
account in designing this proposed rule.
Proposed § 340.3 describes the core list
of general conditions that APHIS would
impose on all permits as well as
additional conditions for specific types
of permits. APHIS is also making it clear
that APHIS may also add other specific
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
conditions to a permit upon its
issuance. Conditions are specific
practices or requirements that an
applicant must follow upon issuance of
a permit. Conditions are added as a
consequence of the APHIS evaluation in
order to make it unlikely that actions
under the permit would result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed.
Several DEIS comments stressed that
APHIS needs to do more to ensure that
the permit conditions it sets are actually
followed and enforced. The changes to
permit procedures proposed for § 340.2
contribute to that goal by obtaining
written agreement from the responsible
person that he or she, and all of their
agents, must comply with all of the
permit conditions before issuance of the
permit.
Almost all DEIS comments on
containers or marking and identity for
regulated articles supported
performance standards for containers.
Most of these commenters made the
point that performance criteria are
generally more adaptable and efficient
than prescriptive criteria. Some stated
that shipping research organisms
interstate in enclosed containers is a
low-risk activity that is very unlikely to
result in release, establishment or harm.
Some commenters stated that the type
of container indicated by performance
standards must be appropriate to the
level of risk in the tiered permit system
for the shipped GE organism. One
commenter requested that APHIS make
its container standards consistent with
the International Air Transporters
Association (IATA) requirements for
shipping.
The way this proposed rule deals with
container standards is consistent with
the above DEIS comments.
Most of the commenters addressing
tiered or categorized permit systems
supported APHIS establishing a tiered
permitting system for plants based on
criteria that included risk and other GE
organism characteristics. However,
commenters also stressed that risk
categories should be based on a trait by
species approach, not on the basis of
individual transformed plant line
(referred to as ‘‘event-by-event’’ in some
of the comments). Some commenters
advised against using limited broad
based categories that include many
different species with different biologies
and different risk factors. Several stated
the importance of evaluating permit
applications on a case-by-case basis, to
avoid the risk that categorizing permit
types could result in approval of risky
releases that were inadvertently seen as
‘‘routine categories.’’
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
Several commenters stated that a
tiered permitting system should be
flexible and allow consideration of any
factors that seem relevant, or allow
reclassification of a GE plant from one
tier to another based on additional
characterization information and agency
familiarity with the GE plant. Some
commenters opposed the development
of a tiered risk-based permitting system
because each transformation event can
have unintended effects that must be
assessed on a case-by-case basis, rather
than through predefined categories. We
have addressed these views in this
proposed rule by changing the permit
tier system described in the DEIS to a
proposed permit application
categorization system that is more
flexible than the system described in the
DEIS.
In the DEIS, APHIS considered
whether to continue to issue
environmental release permits for GE
plants engineered to produce
pharmaceutical and industrial
compounds if the GE plant species is
the same as, or sexually compatible
with, a species commonly used for food
or feed. APHIS concludes that the
permitting procedure with its stringent
permit conditions can continue to
effectively minimize the risks that may
be associated with the environmental
release of such GE plants. APHIS will
continue to impose appropriate permit
conditions that take into account the
issues related to the public safety of
proteins or other substances that these
plants have been engineered to produce.
Numerous commenters supported
banning the outdoor production of
pharmaceuticals and industrial
substances in food and feed crops. Some
stated that food crops should not be
used for the production of
pharmaceuticals and industrial
substances.
Some commenters stated that GE
plants used for the production of
pharmaceuticals and industrial
substances should be evaluated by
criteria that are different from those
used to evaluate crops intended for
food. Other commenters stated that if
such GE industrial plants were made
from food crop species, or could spread
genes to food crop species, they should
be evaluated based on food safety risk,
not the industrial product’s function,
and approved only if they pose no food
safety risks. However, with regard to
evaluating food safety, several
commenters also stated that FDA should
be the agency evaluating these risks.
We have not seen evidence suggesting
that these types of organisms present
unique or uncontrollable risks, or risks
higher than those that may be associated
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60031
with many other uses for GE plants. Our
approach in this proposed rule
addresses the other concerns cited by
DEIS commenters.
Many commenters were concerned
that the outdoor cultivation of GE plants
producing pharmaceutical and
industrial compounds could be a source
of gene flow to nearby non-GE plants or
result in the co-mingling of grain with
related crop species intended for food or
feed. Risks associated with this scenario
may be abated by either of two means:
(1) Preventing such gene flow or comingling from occurring, or (2)
establishing that if such gene flow or comingling to other plants does occur, it
does not present an unacceptable risk of
introducing or disseminating a noxious
weed.
Such gene flow can be minimized or
substantially prevented through permit
conditions developed for environmental
releases of GE pharmaceutical or
industrial plants. In many cases the
genetic and phenotypic characteristics
of the organism also serves to
discourage survivability of the plant
away from the intended site as well as
gene flow to other plants. During the
review prior to permit issuance, APHIS
would also always consider the effects
if the GE plant were likely to spread
widely, or if large-scale gene flow to
other plants occurred. A permit for an
environmental release would not be
approved if APHIS concluded there was
a likelihood of such events causing any
of the types of harm as described in the
noxious weed definition.
One DEIS comment on the issue of
multiple-year permits stated that
compliance agreements should be used
instead of actual multiple-year permits.
Another suggested that multiple-year
permits should be limited to trait/crop
combinations not intended for feed or
food use. In contrast, another comment
stated that APHIS should consider
allowing multi-year permits for any
product, not just GE pharmaceutical or
industrial plants.
Several commenters stated a riskbased opposition to multi-year permits
and stated that crops engineered to
produce pharmaceuticals or industrial
compounds should always be regulated
under an annually-reviewed permit
system.
This proposed rule addresses the riskbased concerns cited by commenters in
the proposed processes for issuing
permits and granting exemptions,
discussed elsewhere in this document.
We propose to allow multi-year permits
for any type of regulated activity, when
we determine that appropriate riskrelated conditions can be prescribed for
those activities. We have not seen any
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60032
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
convincing evidence, in DEIS comments
or elsewhere, that limiting use of multiyear permits to certain types of
organisms would reduce risk or
otherwise serve the purpose of the
regulations.
Of the approximately 67 comments
received by APHIS on the interstate
movement exemptions discussion in the
DEIS, 30 comments appear to support
APHIS’ preferred Alternative 2, under
which APHIS would exempt from
permit requirements for interstate
movement a class of GE plants or
organisms that are well-studied and
present little or no environmental risk,
as is currently done for Arabidopsis.
However, many of these commenters
suggested that APHIS choose an
approach that combined this with one
or more of the other Alternatives.
Several commenters stated that the
regulations should provide a procedure
for APHIS to consider additional
exemptions from interstate movement
restrictions on a case-by-case basis.
APHIS has concluded that the most
appropriate proposal for the regulations
at this time is to provide a clear and
adaptable procedure whereby it would
use a case-by-case approach to consider
the merits of new exemptions from the
requirement for a permit. The
procedure, described in proposed
§ 340.5, would allow for a transparent
procedure in which APHIS would
evaluate the proposed exemption, and
the public would have an opportunity to
review APHIS’ evaluation and provide
comments prior to APHIS decisions on
individual cases. The proposed
procedure should provide the benefit of
transparency and scientific rigor while
affording a more streamlined and costefficient procedure that would not
require formal amendment of the
regulations when each new exemption
is approved.
Several DEIS comments addressed
what criteria in the regulations the
Agency could use to determine the level
of risk assessment applied to imported
GE commodities which are viable
propagules. They fell into two general
groups. Both groups stated that any
expedited review or exemption for GE
commodity imports needed to be
granted based on a review of risk and a
determination that the importation
presented no significant risks. Beyond
that, one group emphasized that
commodity imports were in general
inherently safe, and such an expedited
system would be appropriate and would
also greatly facilitate international trade.
The other group was skeptical about
inherent safety of GE commodities and
suggested that exemptions should only
be offered when there are procedures
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
ensuring that the commodities are made
non-viable or safeguards are in place to
ensure that propagation will not occur.
Some comments in this group also
stated that such exemptions should not
be granted for a GE commodity from any
country until APHIS has confidence that
the country has robust regulatory
guidelines and assessment standards
with strong, reliable science and
trustworthy regulatory oversight,
equivalent in effectiveness to the U.S.
system.
One comment included a general
statement that it was important that a
petitioner for deregulation or exemption
should work closely with APHIS to
develop and evaluate the management
plan under which the subject GE
organism would be grown if deregulated
or exempted. APHIS agrees that its
regulatory approach should include
working closely with petitioners on
their proposals for exemption,
especially if management plans are part
of the requisite conditions. APHIS
would retain some degree of oversight
and could restrict movements of a GE
organism such that the exemption and
its conditions are unlikely to result in
the introduction or dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed. The
proposed procedure to approve
additional conditional exemptions is
sufficiently adaptable even when the
exemption is for all forms of movement
(i.e., importation, interstate movement,
and environmental release).
Very few DEIS comments directly
addressed enforcement and compliance.
A few comments stated that APHIS
regulatory oversight and enforcement of
its regulations in the past have been
insufficient and have provided
inadequate containment of GE crops.
This proposed rule would strengthen
enforcement and compliance and
enhance the effectiveness of the
regulations.
Comments on the discussion in the
DEIS of low level presence ranged from
suggestions that APHIS should
completely prevent such incidents by
banning all outdoor growth of GE plants
to suggestions that LLP is a minor
problem needing only minimal controls,
and does not warrant an increased
regulatory burden to control a minor
risk. Some commenters stated that the
preferred alternative in the DEIS
accepted too high a level of risk. These
commenters generally preferred DEIS
alternative 4, which would impose very
strict permit conditions on all
environmental releases to reduce the
likelihood of LLP events. Most
commenters agreed that APHIS should
adopt an LLP policy that recognizes the
wide variety of risk levels associated
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
with such incidents, and that beyond
applying general criteria APHIS should
investigate each unauthorized release
individually and determine actions
based on the facts surrounding each
incident. Some commenters stated that
any LLP policy should clearly state that
even if an incident was found to be nonactionable (i.e., not requiring remedial
action), persons involved would still be
subject to enforcement actions such as
civil penalties if violations of the
regulations occurred.
APHIS has considered all these views
in the development of this proposed
rule and has attempted to find a
reasonable balance. It is not warranted,
or practical, to implement a ‘‘zero
tolerance’’ LLP policy. Instead, we
propose a policy that each LLP incident
would be individually investigated, and
APHIS would then make a decision on
whether, or what kind of, remedial
action is needed. In making this
determination APHIS would use
established criteria to rate the risks
involved in the LLP incident. However,
these criteria would not fully determine
the APHIS response. In addition to
considering the criteria, APHIS would
evaluate any other relevant information
regarding the LLP incident and order
remedial action if it appears necessary.
Also, we propose to clearly state that
regardless of whether APHIS considers
the LLP actionable with regard to
remediation, any violations of the
regulations or permit conditions can
still result in compliance and
enforcement actions for failure to
comply with the regulations.
One DEIS comment directly
addressed timelines for APHIS to
perform permit- and petition-related
activities and urged APHIS to continue
to define specific timelines for
regulatory reviews to allow for a
predictable regulatory review system.
The comment stated that time frames
are especially critical for field trial
permitting activities since planting
occurs during a narrow window each
year and a delay of a month or two in
a regulatory decision can result in a year
delay due to the inability to timely plant
a field trial.
We understand the concerns, and
have decided to keep the time frames in
the text of the regulations. However, as
discussed above, APHIS will view them
as performance goals and will generally
respond in the time frames indicated,
rather than be obligated to respond at
those times. In recent years, there has
been an increase in the time required for
APHIS review due to the increasing
complexity of issues related to
environmental effects, new traits, and
unfamiliar species. In addition to
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
retaining general time frames in the
regulations, APHIS intends to discuss
time frames with each applicant early in
the application process, and to the
extent possible give the applicant
reliable time estimates based on the
nature and complexity of the particular
application and current APHIS activities
and resources that are expected to affect
the application review.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
B. Executive Order 12866 and
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This proposed rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12866. The rule
has been determined to be significant
for the purposes of Executive Order
12866 and, therefore, has been reviewed
by the Office of Management and
Budget.
We have prepared an economic
analysis for this proposed rule, which is
summarized below. Copies of the full
economic analysis are available by
contacting the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or on the
Regulations.gov Web site (see
ADDRESSES above for instructions for
accessing Regulations.gov). The analysis
provides a cost-benefit analysis, as
required by Executive Order 12866, and
an analysis of the potential economic
effects of this final rule on small
entities, as required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
Background
The adoption of genetically
engineered (GE) crops by farmers
worldwide has become increasingly
widespread. The United States,
Argentina, Brazil, Canada, and China
are the major GE crop adopters. In 2008,
92 percent of soybean, 80 percent of
corn, and 86 percent of cotton acreages
planted in the United States were
genetically engineered (USDA NASS,
2008). In addition to the major field
crops, GE varieties of papaya, yellow
squash, and zucchini were available for
commercial production in 2008.
Worldwide plantings of transgenic
crops grew by 12 percent in 2007,
reaching 282.4 million acres in 23
countries growing biotech crops in
2007, including 12 developing
countries. Over the next decade, use of
these ‘‘first-generation’’ GE crops, which
carry traits such as insect resistance and
herbicide tolerance, should continue to
grow while a second generation of crops
promises new applications and traits
such as improved drought tolerance,
biofuel-related enhancements, and
quality and nutritional traits.3
3 Global Status of Commercialized Biotech/GM
Crops, ISAAA Briefs 37–2007, 35–2006, The
International Service for the Acquisition of AgriBiotech Applications, Cornell University.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
The benefits associated with the use
of some GE crops already in production
include higher yields, lower pesticide
costs, and overall savings in
management time. There are also
environmental benefits from reduced
pesticide use. Attempts have been made
to quantify the benefits that have
occurred as a result of the adoption of
GE crops and, according to a recent
survey, farm-level net economic benefits
worldwide from the adoption of GE
crops were estimated to be $7 billion in
2006 (Brookes and Barfoot 2008). Total
net benefits, 1996–2006, were estimated
to be $34 billion. Of this total estimated
net welfare gains, the United States
experienced the largest benefit, with
$15.8 billion; followed by Argentina,
$6.6 billion; China, $5.8 billion; and
Brazil, $1.9 billion (Brookes and Barfoot
2008). U.S. farmers’ welfare gains from
the adoption of biotechnology ranged
from 29 to 42 percent of total net
welfare gains (Price et al. 2005; FalckZepeda, Traxler, and Nelson 2000).
The high rate of GE crop adoption by
farmers has been driven by an increase
in consumption of product developed
with the use of GE techniques. However,
studies that quantify consumers’
benefits from the use of biotechnology
are limited, as most studies tend to
focus on the direct adopters of
biotechnology, i.e., the producers. Price
et al. (2006) found consumers do benefit
from the adoption of Bt cotton.
Overall, consumers’ gains from the
adoption of various GE crops have been
estimated to range from 4 to 17 percent
of total net welfare gains (Price et al.
2005; Falck-Zepeda, Traxler, and Nelson
2000).
Crop producers and consumers are
not the only beneficiaries of recent
advances in biotechnology. The
providers of biotechnology have also
benefited from the increased adoption of
GE products. Intellectual property right
laws have offered incentives for the
private sector to invest in research and
development of GE products, and as a
result, plant breeding expenditures have
largely shifted from the public to the
private sector (Fuglie 2006). As private
research spending has increased, so has
the number of firms engaged in this type
of research. However, consolidation and
mergers during the 1990’s resulted in an
industry dominated by large companies.
Currently, 80 percent of biotech traits
that have been approved are owned or
co-owned by four firms (Bayer Crop
Science, DuPont, Monsanto, and
Syngenta) or their subsidiaries
(Kalaitzandonakes, Alston, and Bradford
2007).
With regard to the beneficial effects
for the environment of GE plants in
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60033
commercial production, their
production has resulted since 1996 in
decreases in the use of pesticides by 286
million kg and in the use of herbicides
by 51 million kg (Brookes and Barfoot
2008). These declines represent 7.9
percent reductions. In terms of
greenhouse gases, one study estimated
cultivation using no-tillage systems
associated with GE crops modified for
herbicide tolerance to reduce fuel use by
32.52 liters/ha (89 percent) compared to
conventional methods, and 14.7 liters/
ha (76 percent) compared to reduced
tillage methods (Jasa 2002). An
American Soybean Association survey 4
showed significant reductions in tillage,
and therefore in fuel use, by growers of
glyphosate-tolerant soybeans. The fuel
reductions were estimated as 1.26
gallons per acre, or, for the 56 million
acres of glyphosate-tolerant soybeans
planted in 2001, 70 million gallons of
fuel saved and associated greenhouse
gas emissions avoided. These fuel-use
reductions translate into reductions of
carbon dioxide emissions of 89.44 kg/ha
and 40.43 kg/ha, respectively. Overall in
2006, the total carbon dioxide savings
associated with the use of GE crops
were 1.2 billion kg. This is equivalent to
removing 540,000 cars from the streets
for a year.
Benefits of the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule would provide
benefits by establishing more efficient
regulation of GE organisms and
activities subject to part 340 and by
continuing to provide a high level of
protection against risks associated with
these organisms and activities. Benefits
would also include improved public
understanding of and confidence in
APHIS’ biotechnology regulatory
responsibilities, and improved clarity
and transparency of the regulatory
process. Several amendments of the
proposed rule would improve the
efficiency of APHIS’ biotech regulatory
process. Particular proposed changes
that should improve the efficiency of
the regulations include the elimination
of courtesy permits and the
establishment of a procedure to evaluate
and grant requests for new exemptions
from the requirement that GE organisms
have a permit to be imported, moved
interstate, or released into the
environment.
Approving new exemptions could be
done without amending the regulations,
resulting in considerable time savings
4 Cited in Fawcett, Richard and Towery, Dan.
Conservation Tillage and Plant Biotechnology: How
New Technologies Can Improve the Environment
By Reducing the Need to Plow. Conservation
Technology Information Center, West Lafayette,
Indiana.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60034
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
for regulated parties and reducing
APHIS’ rulemaking costs. Persons using
an exemption would also avoid the
costs and delays associated with
obtaining a permit for each new planned
movement or release of a GE organism
covered by the exemption.
APHIS commits considerable
resources to issuing courtesy permits
not actually required by or needed to
implement the part 340 regulations.
These courtesy permits have been
issued to facilitate the movement of GE
organisms that are but whose movement
may be hindered due to their similarity
to organisms that are subject to part 340.
By improving public awareness that
such organisms do not need a permit
and eliminating the courtesy permit
process APHIS would improve
efficiency and reduce its regulatory
workload, and save time for regulated
entities who would no longer make
unnecessary courtesy permit requests.
The Agency currently issues
environmental release permits,
including permits that are used for
production of pharmaceutical and
industrial compounds sold in
commerce. In general, permits for
releases of plants producing
pharmaceutical or industrial
compounds have been limited to a oneyear duration. However, the proposed
regulations provide a more useful and
efficient approach to setting appropriate
risk-related conditions in multi-year
environmental release permits. Under
the proposed system, APHIS would
likely increase issuance of multi-year
environmental release permits, thereby
reducing the time the regulated entities
need to spend submitting applications
as well as the time APHIS spends
reviewing the permit applications.
APHIS’ biotechnology operations
would be aided by more clarity in terms
of required data submissions and
administrative procedures. More detail
is provided regarding what applicant
information is required for each permit
application type, and how application
information relates to the proposed new
permit categories for environmental
release permits. These changes, along
with more clearly defined categories for
the environmental release permits,
would potentially reduce the time some
entities, large or small, spend on an
application or petition process.
Increased efficiency benefits may be
most helpful to smaller companies and
public sector entities, where GE
research is generally conducted on a
much smaller scale than that of large
agri-business enterprises.
The proposal includes provisions to
require necessary recordkeeping and
reporting but to fine-tune this burden
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
through particularized permit
conditions to require only what is
needed to ensure regulatory compliance
based on individual cases. This should
contribute to greater efficiency.
The proposed rule’s greater clarity
and transparency is expected to enhance
the general public’s perception of
APHIS regulation in this area, with
associated benefits from increased
support of and compliance with the
regulations.
In addition to the information
provided in the regulations, APHIS
proposes to develop new guidance
documents to assist in the preparation
and submission of applications.
Costs of the Proposed Rule
There are several cost areas associated
with the proposed rule. Costs associated
with the proposed rule that regulated
entities would incur include costs of
learning and adapting procedures to
changed requirements, providing more
or different information in permit
applications, and additional
recordkeeping for some entities. The
additional recordkeeping burden is
discussed below in the Paperwork
Reduction Act section. Annual costs
resulting from the additional
recordkeeping may be estimated as the
salary and associated costs for 640
additional hours of recordkeeping
divided among 160 respondents.
Many provisions of the proposed
regulations are revisions of the current
regulations, and it is not expected that
familiarization costs would be
substantial. However, estimates of these
costs are not available and therefore
APHIS invites public comment on the
costs the regulated community may
incur with respect to rule
familiarization and changes to their
application systems.
Costs to APHIS are currently incurred
in the regulatory assessment and review
of submitted materials. Because the new
permit process is largely similar to the
current process, it is expected that
ongoing permit processing costs to
APHIS would remain essentially
unchanged. As a start-up cost to change
the permit system to accommodate
requirements of the proposed rule,
APHIS may potentially incur a one-time
additional cost of $500,000. However
the current system is adaptable to the
new regulations and it is not anticipated
that there would be any efficiency loss
during the transitional period. APHIS
would also potentially incur
incremental costs conducting outreach
activities for the proposed rule,
developing guidance documents to
ensure that the regulated community is
familiar with the requirements of the
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
rule, and providing staff training that
may be necessary. Because of the new
definition of the scope of the
regulations, APHIS may devote more
resources to consultations with
regulated parties if they request
consultation to determine whether
particular GE organisms are or are not
subject to the regulations. Such
consultation should decrease after the
first year or two of implementation, as
such determinations of regulated status
accumulate and become the basis for
guidance of general applicability.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
In accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96–354),
this analysis considers the economic
impact of the proposed rule on small
businesses, small organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions.
Section 603 of the Act requires that the
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA) be made available for public
comments. This section addresses the
IRFA requirements, as stated in Sections
603(b) and 603(c) of the Act.
Reasons Action Is Being Considered
APHIS is taking action to amend 7
CFR part 340, which was promulgated
in 1987 under the authority of the
Federal Plant Pest Act of 1957 and the
Plant Quarantine Act of 1912. These
acts were subsequently subsumed
within the Plant Protection Act (PPA) of
2000, and the proposed revisions would
bring part 340 in alignment with this
Act. Advances in biotechnology and
accumulation of oversight experience by
APHIS have also made it necessary to
revise and update the regulations, and
in addition, the 2008 Farm Bill (The
Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of
2008) enacted most recently contains
provisions that need to be incorporated
into the proposed rule. The proposed
changes would improve the regulatory
process by providing greater
transparency, flexibility, and efficiency.
Objective and Legal Basis for the Rule
The objectives of this rule are to
amend part 340 to provide consistency
with the PPA authorities and to
incorporate updates and improvements
to provide a more efficient regulatory
process while controlling potential risk
to plant health and the environment.
The PPA authorizes the Secretary of
Agriculture to implement programs and
policies designed to prevent the
introduction and spread of plant pests
and diseases. Specifically, the Secretary
of Agriculture is given the authority
under the PPA to prevent the
importation or dissemination of plant
pests and noxious weeds. To do so, the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Secretary may regulate the importation,
interstate movement, and release into
the environment of any plant, plant
product, biological control organism,
noxious weed, article, or means of
conveyance that could potentially
spread plant pests or noxious weeds.
Description and Estimate of the Number
of Small Entities Regulated
The proposed rule may affect a wide
range of public and private
biotechnology research facilities, GE
crop and seed production, food
processors, grain processors, and paper
producers that fall into various
categories of the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS).
For the purpose of this analysis and
following the Small Business
Administration (SBA) guidelines, the
potentially affected entities are
classified within the following sectors:
Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and
Hunting (Sector 11), Manufacturing
(Sectors 31–33), Wholesale Trade
(Sector 42), Retail Trade (Sector 44 and
45), Transportation (Sectors 48 and 49),
and Professional, Scientific and
Technical Services (Sector 54).
For the Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing
and Hunting sector, the subsectors of
Crop Production, Animal Production,
Forestry and Logging, and Support
Activities for Agriculture and Forestry
are potentially affected by this rule. The
proposed rule may affect a wide range
of establishments in the Crop
Production category. Establishments in
this category are considered small by
SBA standards if annual sales are not
more than $0.75 million. According to
the 2002 Census of Agriculture, 97
percent of the farming businesses are
considered small. Potentially affected
crop-producing industries, with their
NAICS codes in parentheses, are as
follows: Soybean Farming (111110);
Oilseed Farming (except soybean)
(111120); Dry Pea and Bean Farming
(111130); Wheat Farming (111140); Corn
Farming (111150); Rice Farming
(111160); Oilseed and Grain
Combination Farming (111191); All
Other Grain Farming (111199); Potato
Farming (111211); Other Vegetable
(except potato) and Melon Farming
(111219); Orange Groves (111310);
Citrus (except orange) Groves (111320);
Apple Orchards (111331); Grape
Vineyards (111332); Strawberry Farming
(111333); Berry (except Strawberry)
Farming (111334); Tree Nut Farming
(111335); Fruit and Tree Nut
Combination Farming (111336); Other
Noncitrus Fruit Farming (111337);
Mushroom Production (111411); Other
Food Crops Grown Under Cover
(111419); Nursery and Tree Production
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
(111421); Floriculture Production
(111422); Tobacco Farming (111910);
Cotton Farming (111920); Sugarcane
Farming (111930); Hay Farming
(111940); Sugar Beet Farming (111950);
Peanut Farming (111960); and All other
Miscellaneous Crop Farming (111970).
Some aspects of animal production
may be affected because some GE plants
are used for animal feeds and may have
enhanced nutritional value or other
benefits. In terms of animal production,
potentially affected entities include
ones within the following industries:
Beef Cattle Ranching and Farming
(NAICS 112111); Cattle Feedlots (NAICS
112112); Hog and Pig Farming (NAICS
112210); Sheep Farming (NAICS
112410); Goat Farming (NAICS 112420);
and Apiculture (NAICS 112910). Except
for Cattle Feedlots, entities in all of
these industries are considered small by
SBA standards if annual sales are not
more than $0.75 million. Cattle Feedlot
establishments are considered small by
SBA standards if annual sales are not
more than $2 million. According to the
2002 Census of Agriculture, 93 percent
of Cattle Feedlot businesses, 99 percent
of Beef Cattle Ranching and Farming
businesses, 81 percent of Hog and Pig
Farming businesses, 99 percent of Sheep
and Goat farming businesses, and 99
percent of Apiculture businesses are
considered small.
For the Forestry and Logging
subsector the potentially affected
establishments are classified within
Timber Tract Operations (NAICS
113110); Forest Nursery and Gathering
of Forest Products (NAICS 113210); and
Logging (NAICS 113310).
Establishments in the category of
Timber Tract Operations and Forest
Nursery and Gathering of Forest
Products are considered small by SBA
standards if annual sales are not more
than $6.5 million and establishments in
the category of Logging are considered
small if employment is not more than
500. According to the 2002 Survey of
Business Owners, 99 percent of
establishments in the Logging category
are considered small. Neither the
Census of Agriculture nor the Economic
Census tracks revenue for
establishments classified within Timber
Tract Operations and Forest Nursery
and Gathering of Forest Products.
In terms of Support Activities for
Agriculture and Forestry, the potentially
affected establishments are classified
within Cotton Ginning (NAICS 11511);
Soil Preparation, Planting, and
Cultivating (NAICS 115112); Crop
Harvesting (NAICS 115113); Postharvest
Crop Activities (NAICS 115114); Farm
Management Services (115116) Support
Activities for Animal Production
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60035
(NAICS 115210); and Support Activities
for Forestry (NAICS 115310).
Establishments in these categories are
considered small by SBA standards if
annual sales are not more than $6.5
million. However, neither the Census of
Agriculture nor the Economic Census
reports revenue for these
establishments.
Entities that may be directly affected
by the proposed rule in the
Manufacturing Sector are classified
within Ethyl Alcohol Manufacturing
(NAICS 325193); Pesticide and Other
Agricultural Chemical Manufacturing
(NAICS 325320); Pharmaceutical
Preparation Manufacturing (NAICS
325412); and Medicinal and Botanical
Manufacturing (NAICS 325411).
Establishments in the Ethyl Alcohol
Manufacturing category are considered
small if they employ not more than
1,000 persons and those in the category
of Pesticide and Other Agricultural
Chemical Manufacturing (NAICS
325320) are considered small if they
employ not more than 500 persons. For
both the Pharmaceutical Preparation
Manufacturing (NAICS 325412); and
Medicinal and Botanical Manufacturing
(NAICS 325411) categories,
establishments are considered small if
they employ not more than 750 persons.
According to the 2002 Economic
Census, 98 percent of the establishments
in the Chemical Manufacturing Sector
had fewer than 500 employees and 99
percent had fewer than 1000. Therefore,
businesses in the chemical
manufacturing are predominantly small
by SBA standards.
In terms of Wholesale Trade, entities
that would be potentially affected may
be found in the following categories:
Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Merchant
Wholesalers (NAICS 424480); Other
Grocery and Related Products Merchant
Wholesalers (NAICS 424490); Grain and
Field Bean Merchant Wholesalers
(NAICS 424510); Other Farm Product
Raw Material Merchant Wholesalers
(NAICS 424590); Farm Supplies and
Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS 424910);
and Flower, Nursery Stock, and Florists’
Supplies Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS
424930). Establishments in the above
categories are considered small by SBA
standards if they employ not more than
100 persons. According to the 2002
Survey of Business Owners, 97 percent
of the establishments in this category
employed fewer than 100 people and
are considered small by SBA standards.
Retail Trade, establishments that
would be affected by the rules are in the
following categories: Nursery and
Garden Centers (NAICS 444220);
Supermarkets and Other Grocery Stores
(NAICS 445110); Fruit and Vegetable
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60036
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Markets (NAICS 445230); All Other
Specialty Food Stores (NAICS 445299);
Food (Health) Supplement Stores
(NAICS 446191); Warehouse Clubs and
Superstores (NAICS 452910); and Florist
(NAICS 453110). Establishments in the
Nursery and Garden Center, Fruit and
Vegetable Markets, All other Specialty
Food Stores, Food (Health) Supplement
Stores; and Florist categories are
considered small by SBA standards if
annual sales are not more than $6.5
million. Supermarkets and Other
Grocery Stores are considered small by
SBA standards if annual sales are not
more than $25 million. While the
Economic Census reports total annual
sales, the Census does not provide a
breakdown of these establishments by
revenue categories.
In terms of the Transportation sector,
the potentially affected entities are in
the category Farm Product Warehousing
and Storage (NAICS 493130).
Establishments in this category are
considered small by SBA standards if
annual sales are not more than $23.5
million. However, the Economic Census
reports only total revenue for all
establishments in this category.
In terms of Professional, Scientific
and Technical Services, establishments
in the category of Research and
Development in the Physical,
Engineering, and Life Sciences (NAICS
54170) may be affected. Establishments
in this category are considered small by
SBA standards if they employ not more
than 500 persons. According to 2002
Economic Census, 82 percent of the
establishments in this category are
considered small.
Although information was not
available on the business sizes for all
potentially affected establishments,
based on the foregoing information we
can assume that the majority of the
entities that may be affected by the
proposed rule are small by SBA
standards.
Given the aforementioned, a review of
entities that have made application
requests to APHIS shows that of the 420
applicants for the last 6 years, 263 were
universities and colleges and public and
private research institutions. The
remainder of the applicants fall under
various NAICS classification codes
specified above but given time
constraints their business size could not
be readily determined. We were able to
ascertain that the 263 institutions (63
percent) are large by SBA standards as
they fall under NAICS code 54170
Research and Development in Physical
Science. Establishments in this category
are considered small by SBA standards
if they employ not more than 500
persons. Even though the 2002
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
Economic Census suggests that 82
percent of the establishments in this
category are considered small, the
majority of applicants to APHIS are
large by SBA standards.5
Description and Estimate of Compliance
Requirement
The proposed rule would require
additional and modified information
collections through recordkeeping,
reporting, and notifications to APHIS
when certain events occur. The
proposed application process requires
certain new information. The current
and proposed rules both require
submission of reports following an
environmental release or field test, but
the proposed requirement is more
specific about the contents of such
reports. Both the current and proposed
rules require APHIS to be notified if an
unauthorized release occurs or if during
release the GE organism is found to have
characteristics substantially different
from those anticipated by the permit.
The proposed rule is more specific
about the types of records that must be
kept for importations, interstate
movements, and environmental
releases, where the current regulations
left more of these details to be specified
only in permit conditions. In terms of
record retention requirements, the
proposed rule spells out a 2-year
retention for records indicating that a
GE organism imported or moved
interstate reached its intended
destination, and a 5-year retention for
all other required records. By providing
more specific information on what
records are required, the proposed rule
should alleviate some current burden
that may result from persons keeping
unnecessary records. In addition, APHIS
has established the Biotechnology
Quality Management System (BQMS),
which is a voluntary compliance
assistance unit within USDA APHIS.
BQMS would facilitate the regulatory
efforts of USDA APHIS by conducting
outreach activities and providing
compliance assistance to the regulated
community. This would lessen any
burden of the proposed rule to the
regulated community.
Duplication, Overlap, and Conflict With
Existing Rules and Regulations
APHIS has identified areas where the
proposed rule will need to be closely
coordinated with other Federal rules
and statutory authorities. Coordination
has been an important aspect of the
daily implementation of the current
5 The size determination was made using public
information about these entities. This information
was primarily obtained from the entities’ Web sites.
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
regulation, and APHIS foresees
additional areas for coordination under
the proposed rule. In particular, APHIS
will coordinate with the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) and the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA). FDA regulates GE organisms
under the authority of the Federal Food,
Drug and Cosmetic Act and the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 262 et
seq.), as appropriate. The EPA regulates
plant-incorporated protectants under
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and certain
biological control organisms under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
As examples of areas that need
coordination, some of the plantincorporated protectants regulated by
EPA are also subject to APHIS
requirements under the PPA. Also, FDA
is the primary U.S. agency responsible
for ensuring the safety of commercial
food and food additives, and FDA
authority extends to any nonpesticidal
substance that may be introduced into a
new GE plant and that is expected to
become a component of food. The
proposed regulations would clarify the
regulatory scope and procedures used
by APHIS relative to these other
agencies and improve the coordination
process.
Significant Alternatives to the Rule
APHIS considered several significant
alternatives during development of this
proposed rule. We have compared the
selected alternatives to others that were
not selected to evaluate their feasibility
and to consider whether any
alternatives provide ways to minimize
significant economic impacts on small
entities. We have not identified any
selected alternative that imposes
disproportionate costs on small
businesses, or any non-selected
alternative that would both achieve the
regulatory purposes and reduce costs for
small businesses.
The selected alternative regarding the
scope of the regulatory oversight was to
add considerations of noxious weed risk
in addition to evaluating plant pest
risks, and to use genetic transformation,
coupled with a determination by the
Administrator as to whether a GE
organism met certain risk-based criteria,
as the trigger for regulation. Other
alternatives considered included
continuing to base the scope of
regulation only on plant pest risks, or
trying to develop a set of solely traitbased criteria that could be used to
predict what articles would be regulated
without the need for determinations by
the Administrator. The first of these
alternatives could have resulted in costs
from damages caused by a GE plant with
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
noxious weed aspects that was not
regulated under the plant pest risks
standard. The second alternative was
not considered technically feasible, and
could also have resulted in costs for
persons who erroneously decide their
GE plant is not within the scope of the
regulations, but are overruled by a later
determination by the Administrator that
the GE plant is regulated.
The selected alternative for providing
transparency and predictability to the
permitting system was to establish
permit categories for environmental
releases of plants based on newly
devised criteria. We also considered
evaluating all requests for
environmental release permits on a
case-by-case basis, without categories.
This alternative would have resulted in
less predictability for applicants, and
likely would have increased their costs
for information collection because
applications known to be in a particular
category can contain less information
about non-relevant areas.
The selected alternative regarding the
duration period for permits was to make
multi-year permits for interstate
movement and importation more
feasible by removing the one-year limit
for interstate movement permits and the
requirement to obtain a new importation
permit for each imported shipment. We
also considered alternatives to maintain
either the current or alternative specific
time limits for such permits. These
alternatives would have resulted in
additional costs for applicants who
would have to reapply for permits,
rather than having the original permit
issued with an appropriate duration.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
C. Executive Order 12372
This program/activity is listed in the
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
under No. 10.025 and is subject to
Executive Order 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with
State and local officials. (See 7 CFR part
3015, subpart V.)
D. Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. If this proposed rule is
adopted: (1) No State or local laws or
regulations would be preempted by this
rule; (2) no retroactive effect will be
given to this rule; and (3) administrative
proceedings will not be required before
parties may file suit in court challenging
this rule.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with section 3507(d) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the information
collection or recordkeeping
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
requirements included in this proposed
rule have been submitted for approval to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The information collection or
recordkeeping requirements in current 7
CFR part 340 have been approved under
OMB Control No. 0579–0085. Please
send written comments to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for
APHIS, Washington, DC 20503. Please
state that your comments refer to Docket
No. APHIS–2008–0023. Please send a
copy of your comments to: (1) Docket
No. APHIS–2008–0023, Regulatory
Analysis and Development, PPD,
APHIS, Station 3A–03.8, 4700 River
Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737–
1238, and (2) Clearance Officer, OCIO,
USDA, room 404–W, 14th Street and
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250. A comment to
OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days
of publication of this proposed rule.
This proposed rule contains certain
information collection and
recordkeeping requirements that would
apply to persons and their agents
engaged in the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment of any GE organism that is
subject to the regulations. The majority
of the requirements would apply to
persons moving GE organisms under a
permit issued by APHIS, but some
requirements also apply to persons
engaged in regulatory activities with GE
organisms even when no permit is
required, e.g., when they are exempted
from the interstate movement permit
requirement.
The proposed information and
recordkeeping requirements are found
in § 340.3, Permit conditions, and in
§ 340.7, Compliance, enforcement, and
remedial action. Permit conditions for
individual permits issued under the
regulations may also require that certain
records relevant to the particular
movement must be kept.
The proposed permit conditions for
shipments imported or moved interstate
include maintaining records of the same
types of information that the current
regulations require to be on the package
labeling of such shipments (nature and
quantity, sender, destination, permit
number, etc.) We believe that most
persons shipping or importing GE
organisms already maintain such
records as part of normal business
practices.
The proposed permit conditions for
environmental releases include keeping
records of all protocols or guidelines
used to direct any environmental
release. The current regulations already
require persons conducting an
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60037
environmental release under permit or
notification to create and submit to
APHIS a field test report, and in many
cases the protocol or guidelines would
normally be included in these field
reports. This proposed change would
require that the protocols or guidelines
be kept in all cases as distinctly
identifiable records, which may cause
some increase in recordkeeping burden.
In some particular environmental
release cases where higher risk levels
make it necessary, the proposed rule
would allow APHIS to add a special
permit condition requiring the permit
holder to maintain and make available
to APHIS written manuals or protocols
describing how specified permit
conditions will be met, such as
management practices used for the
environmental release, training,
communications, and identity
preservation systems. This would be
used in cases where it is deemed
necessary to provide specific guidance
in addition to the proposed general
condition for all permits (i.e., that the
holder must keep records related to
permitted activities of sufficient quality
and completeness to demonstrate
compliance with all permit conditions
and requirements under this part).
Another proposed permit condition
would require permit holders to develop
and keep a written contingency plan to
respond to any unauthorized
environmental release. Both of these
recordkeeping requirements would be
added because some researchers or
developers were found to be unclear
about what management and
communications practices were needed
to prevent unauthorized releases, and
also about their responsibilities and the
measures they must take in the event of
an unauthorized release.
The proposed procedure to apply for
an environmental release permit
requires applicants to submit a great
deal of information characterizing the
nature of the GE organism, the type of
movement and release planned, plans
and methods used to prevent
unauthorized releases, and other
matters. Most of the same information is
obtained through the current
application process, which allows the
Administrator to require an applicant to
submit any additional information that
is needed for adequate evaluation of the
application. The proposed application
procedure is more specific in describing
what information is required, and may
result in a slight increase in the amount
of information submitted with the
average application.
The reporting burden for permit
holders under the proposed rule would
be similar to the burden under the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60038
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
current regulations. In both cases they
must submit reports of all field tests to
APHIS, report any unauthorized
releases, and submit any additional
reports required as individual permit
conditions in their permits.
The current regulations do not specify
record retention periods, although some
permits APHIS issued included specific
retention requirements as permit
conditions. This proposal would require
that records associated with an
importation or interstate shipment must
be retained for at least 2 years after
completion of the movement, and all
other records (e.g., regarding
environmental releases) must be
retained for at least 5 years after
completion of all obligations required
under a relevant permit or exemption.
We are soliciting comments from the
public (as well as affected agencies)
concerning our proposed information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements. These comments will
help us:
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
information collection is necessary for
the proper performance of our agency’s
functions, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the proposed
information collection, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
information collection on those who are
to respond (such as through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses).
Estimate of burden: Public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated to average 2 hours per
response.
Respondents: Public and private
biotechnology research facilities, GE
crop and seed producers, food
processors, grain processors, and paper
producers that fall into various
categories of the North American
Industry Classification System.
Estimated annual number of
respondents: 160.
Estimated annual number of
responses per respondent: 2.
Estimated annual number of
responses: 320.
Estimated total annual burden on
respondents: 640 hours.
Copies of this information collection
can be obtained from Celeste Sickles,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
the Agency Information Management
Specialist, at (301) 851–2908.
F. E-Government Act Compliance
The Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service is committed to
compliance with the E-Government Act
to promote the use of the Internet and
other information technologies, to
provide increased opportunities for
citizen access to Government
information and services, and for other
purposes. For information pertinent to
E-Government Act compliance related
to this proposed rule, please contact
Mrs. Celeste Sickles, the Agency
Information Management Specialist, at
(301) 851–2908.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 340
Administrative practice and
procedure, Biotechnology, Genetic
engineering, Imports, Packaging and
containers, Permits, Plant diseases and
pests, Noxious weeds, Transportation.
Accordingly, we propose to revise 7
CFR part 340 to read as follows:
PART 340—IMPORTATION,
INTERSTATE MOVEMENT, AND
RELEASE INTO THE ENVIRONMENT
OF CERTAIN GENETICALLY
ENGINEERED ORGANISMS
Sec.
340.0 Scope and general restrictions.
340.1 Definitions.
340.2 Procedure for permits.
340.3 Permit conditions.
340.4 Conditional exemptions from the
requirement for a permit for interstate
movement.
340.5 Petition for new conditional
exemptions from the requirement for a
permit.
340.6 Petition for nonregulated status.
340.7 Compliance, enforcement, and
remedial action.
340.8 Confidential business information.
340.9 Costs and charges.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701–7772 and 7781–
7786; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and
371.3.
§ 340.0
Scope and general restrictions.
(a) In order to prevent the
unauthorized introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed, no person shall import, move
interstate, or release into the
environment genetically engineered
organisms described in paragraph (b) of
this section, unless the importation,
interstate movement, or release into the
environment:
(1) Is authorized under a permit
issued by the Administrator in
accordance with § 340.2, or
(2) Is exempt from the requirements
for a permit in accordance with § 340.4
or § 340.5, or
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
(3) Is approved for nonregulated
status in accordance with § 340.6 or has
previously been approved for
nonregulated status pursuant to former
regulations under this part, or
(4) Is excluded in accordance with
paragraph (d) of this section.
(b) Genetically engineered organisms
whose importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment is subject to the
regulations in this part are:
(1) Genetically engineered plants if:
(i) The unmodified parent plant from
which the GE plant was derived is a
plant pest or noxious weed, or
(ii) The trait introduced by genetic
engineering could increase the potential
for the GE plant to be a plant pest or
noxious weed, or
(iii) The risk that the GE plant poses
as a plant pest or noxious weed is
unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines
that the GE plant poses a plant pest or
noxious weed risk.
(2) Genetically engineered non-plant,
non-vertebrate organisms if:
(i) The recipient organism can directly
or indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in plants or plant
products; or
(ii) The GE organism has been
engineered in such a way that it may
increase the potential for it to be a plant
pest: or
(iii) The risk that the GE organism
poses as a plant pest is unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines
that the GE organism poses a plant pest
risk.
(3) Opportunity to consult APHIS.
Any person may contact APHIS to
discuss how the criteria of this
paragraph apply in the case of a
particular GE organism or group of
organisms.
(c) The Administrator may issue
permits for the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment of certain genetically
engineered organisms described in
paragraph (a) of this section. These
permits may include such requirements
or conditions as the Administrator
deems necessary to prevent the
unauthorized introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. The Administrator may also
designate certain exemptions from the
requirement to obtain permits. The
Administrator may also approve for
nonregulated status a genetically
engineered organism described in
paragraph (a) of this section for which
a determination has been made by the
Administrator that the organism is
unlikely to be a plant pest or noxious
weed.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(d) Genetically engineered
microorganisms that are regulated as
biological control organisms under the
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act are not subject to the
regulations in this part. Genetically
engineered microorganisms where the
recipient microorganism is not a plant
pest and which has resulted from the
addition of genetic material from a
donor organism where the material is
well characterized and contains only
non-coding regulatory regions are not
subject to the regulations in this part.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
§ 340.1
Definitions.
Terms used in the singular form in
this part shall be construed as the
plural, and vice versa, as the case may
demand. The following terms, when
used in this part, shall be construed,
respectively, to mean:
Administrator. The Administrator of
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS) or any other employee
of APHIS to whom authority has been,
or may be, delegated to act in the
Administrator’s stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS). An agency of the
United States Department of
Agriculture.
Confidential business information,
CBI. Information such as trade secrets or
commercial or financial information
that may be exempt from disclosure
under Exemption 4 of the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), because
disclosure could reasonably be expected
to cause substantial competitive harm.
USDA regulations on how the agency
will handle CBI and how to determine
what information may be exempt from
disclosure under FOIA (5 U.S.C. 552)
are found at 7 CFR 1.12.
Contained facility, contained
structure. A physical structure designed
to minimize release into the outdoor
environment. Examples of contained
structures include, but are not limited
to, laboratories, containment
greenhouses, bioreactors, and
fermenters.
Contingency plan. A written plan
stating how the responsible person will
respond in the event of the
unauthorized environmental release of
GE organisms.
Donor organism. The organism from
which genetic material is obtained for
transfer to the recipient organism in the
process of genetic engineering.
Environmental release. See definition
of Release into the environment.
Exempt, exempted, exemption from
permit. A determination by the
Administrator that the importation,
interstate movement, and/or release into
the environment of an organism or class
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
of organisms described in § 340.0(a) is
not subject to the requirement to have
a permit under this part. An exemption
from one type of permit (e.g., interstate
movement) does not remove remaining
obligations to obtain other permits
under this part.
Genetic engineering. The genetic
modification of organisms by
recombinant DNA techniques.
Genetically engineered, GE. A term
applied to organisms that have been
produced by genetic engineering, e.g.,
GE organisms, GE plants.
Import and importation. To move
into, or the act of movement into, the
territorial limits of the United States.
Inspector. Any employee of the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
or other person, authorized by the
Administrator, in accordance with law
to enforce the provisions of this part.
Interstate movement. Movement from
any State into or through any other
State.
Means of conveyance. Any personal
property used for, or intended for use
for, the movement of any other personal
property. This specifically includes, but
is not limited to, automobiles, trucks,
railway cars, aircraft, boats, freight
containers, and other means of
transportation.
Nonregulated status. A determination
by the Administrator that an organism
described in § 340.0(a) is not subject to
any of the regulatory requirements of
this part.
Noxious weed. Any plant or plant
product that can directly or indirectly
injure or cause damage to crops
(including nursery stock or plant
products), livestock, poultry, or other
interests of agriculture, irrigation,
navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the
environment.
Organism. Any active, infective, or
dormant stage or life form of an entity
characterized as living, including
vertebrate and invertebrate animals,
plants, bacteria, fungi, mycoplasmas,
mycoplasma-like organisms, as well as
entities such as viroids, viruses, or any
entity characterized as living, related to
the foregoing.
Permit. A written authorization by the
Administrator for the importation,
interstate movement, and/or release into
the environment of a GE organism under
this part.
Person. Any individual, partnership,
corporation, company, joint venture,
society, association, or other legal
entity.
Plant. Any plant (including any plant
part) for or capable of propagation,
including trees, tissue cultures, plantlet
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60039
cultures, pollen, shrubs, vines, cuttings,
grafts, scions, buds, bulbs, roots, and
seeds.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of
the following that can directly or
indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in any plant or plant
product: A protozoan, a nonhuman
animal, a parasitic plant, a bacterium, a
fungus, a virus or viroid, an infectious
agent or other pathogen, or any other
living stage similar to or allied with any
of these organisms.
Plant product. Any flower, fruit,
vegetable, root, bulb, seed, or other
plant part that is not included in the
definition of plant; or any manufactured
or processed plant or plant part.
Recipient organism. The organism
that will receive the genetic material
from a donor organism in the process of
genetic engineering (once the organism
is engineered it is referred to as the
genetically engineered (GE) organism).
Release into the environment.
Dispersal beyond the constraints of a
contained facility or secure shipment.
Synonymous with the term
environmental release.
Responsible person. The person who
has control and will maintain control
over a GE organism during its
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment and
assures compliance with all conditions
contained in any applicable permit or
exemption as well as other requirements
in this part. A responsible person shall
be at least 18 years of age and be a legal
resident of the United States or
designate an agent who is at least 18
years of age and a legal resident of the
United States.
Secure shipment. Shipment in a
container or a means of conveyance of
sufficient strength and integrity to
withstand leakage of contents, shocks,
pressure changes, and other conditions
incident to ordinary handling in
transportation.
Signature, signed. The discrete,
verifiable symbol of an individual
which, when affixed to a writing with
the knowledge and consent of the
individual, indicates a present intention
to authenticate the writing. This
includes electronic signatures when
authorized by the Administrator.
State. Any State of the United States,
the District of Columbia, American
Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana
Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands
of the United States, and any other
Territories, Possessions, or Districts of
the United States.
State or tribal regulatory official. State
or tribal official with responsibilities for
plant health, or any other duly
designated State or tribal official, in the
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60040
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
State or on the tribal lands where the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment is to take
place.
United States. All of the States.
Write, writing, written. Any document
or communication required by this part
to be in writing may also be provided
by electronic communication when
authorized by the Administrator.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
§ 340.2
Procedure for permits.
(a) General. A permit is required for
the importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of any GE
organism that is subject to this part, as
described in § 340.0, The responsible
person seeking a permit for the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of such
organisms shall submit a written
application for a permit to APHIS in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section and obtain the permit prior to
the importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment.
(b) Types of permits. The
Administrator may issue the following
three types of permits under this part.
(1) Import permit. Import permits are
for secure shipment via any means of
conveyance from outside the United
States into contained facilities within
the United States.
(2) Interstate movement permit.
Interstate movement permits are for
secure shipment via any means of
conveyance from a contained facility in
any State into or through any other State
to another contained facility.
(3) Environmental release permit.
Environmental release permits are for
the environmental release of GE
organisms. In cases in which
importation and interstate movements
will occur incidental to an
environmental release, the importation
and interstate movements will also be
authorized under the environmental
release permit.
(c) Permit application information
requirements. Applicants must submit
to APHIS sufficient information about
the specific nature of the GE organism
and the particular proposed permit
conditions, so that the Administrator is
able to consider whether the proposed
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment is likely to
result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. The basic information required in
permit applications is described in this
paragraph. The type and level of detail
needed for the Administrator to issue a
permit may vary by type of permit. For
environmental releases, application
information will be used to sort
proposed releases of GE organisms into
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
administrative categories described in
paragraph (d) of this section. Applicants
should consult with APHIS prior to
applying for permits in order to obtain
further guidance as to what additional
information the Administrator may
require to be submitted with the
application.
(1) Information required in all permit
applications. Each application must
include all of the following information,
and any other information specified for
individual types of permits as described
in this paragraph:
(i) The name, title, and contact
information (e.g., mailing address, email, telephone and fax numbers) of the
responsible person;
(ii) The type of permit sought
(importation, interstate movement, or
environmental release, and if the permit
is for environmental release, which
category);
(iii) Information necessary to identify
and characterize the GE organism(s) for
which a permit is sought, including:
(A) The scientific names of all donor
and recipient species plus any
designations used for the GE
organism(s) (e.g., strain, line, variety);
(B) The form of the GE organism (e.g.,
seeds, rootstocks, tubers, spores, larvae,
eggs) and the amount (e.g., numbers,
total weight or volume); and a
description of any biological material
accompanying the GE organism under
permit (e.g., culture medium, or host
organisms, etc.);
(C) The anticipated phenotype of the
GE organism and the nature of the
inserted sequences or other genetic
modification intended to confer the
phenotype;
(D) Intended uses of the GE organism
after the termination of the importation,
interstate movement, or environmental
release (e.g., contained research in
laboratories or containment
greenhouses, culturing, propagation,
breeding, processing for analysis or
manufacture, sale and distribution for
consumption); and
(E) Description of how the GE
organism will be marked, labeled, or
otherwise identified during the
importation, interstate movement, or
environmental release;
(iv) The proposed time frame
(estimated start and duration) within
which the importation(s), interstate
movement(s) or environmental
release(s) will occur;
(v) Description of how permit
requirements will be communicated to
persons having contact with the GE
organism under permit;
(vi) Description of any training given
to persons having contact with the GE
organism under permit, including but
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
not limited to detailed information on
how this training will facilitate
compliance with conditions imposed
under the permit and any other
regulatory requirements under this part;
and
(vii) A certification statement signed
by the responsible person that certifies
that the application information is
correct.
(2) Additional information required in
all applications for importation permits,
interstate movement permits, and all
environmental release permits that
include importation or interstate
movement.
(i) The location(s) of the origin(s) and
destination(s), including information on
the addresses, and contact details of the
sender(s) and recipient(s), if different
from the responsible person.
(ii) A description of the method of
secure shipment.
(iii) A description of the manner in
which packaging material, shipping
containers, and any other material
accompanying the GE organism will be
disposed.
(3) Additional information required in
all environmental release permit
applications. Information should
address the persistence risk and
potential harm of the GE organism in
the environment, including but not
limited to:
(i) A description of how the
phenotype of the GE organism differs
from the phenotype of the recipient
organism, particularly with respect to
potential interactions with and its
likelihood of persistence in the
environment.
(ii) The location and size of all
proposed release sites, including area,
geographic coordinates, addresses, and
contact information of a person at each
release site, if different from the
responsible person. Include information
about the ecology and agronomy of each
site, including but not limited to:
(A) Presence of any wild or cultivated
species that are sexually compatible
with the GE organism;
(B) Presence of any Federally-listed
threatened or endangered species that
could interact with the GE organism
during the release;
(C) Presence of any designated critical
habitat, or habitat proposed for
designation, in the area of the release
site; and
(D) Land use history of the site and
adjacent areas.
(iii) A description of the site
management practices and control
procedures designed to make it unlikely
that there will be unauthorized
introduction or dissemination of the GE
organism beyond the proposed area and
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
the permit time frame of release. Each
of the descriptions shall include:
(A) Description of the methods and
stages of transport of the GE organism
from a contained facility to the
environmental release site, and any
storage methods used at the site;
(B) Description of methods of
planting, inoculation, or release; any
reproductive or cultural controls;
methods of treatment and harvest used
for the GE organism; and a proposed
plan for monitoring the site for pests,
diseases, and effects on other organisms
during the time the GE organism is
released;
(C) Description of the methods and
stages of transport of the GE organism
from release site back into contained
facilities, or methods of devitalization at
the site(s) of the environmental release;
(D) Description of the cleaning,
disinfection, or other methods used to
make it unlikely that unauthorized
dissemination of the GE organism into
the environment could occur via means
of conveyance and other articles (e.g.,
planters, harvesters, containers);
(E) Description of any post-release
land use practices, including any
monitoring plans to ensure that the GE
organism or its progeny are unlikely to
reproduce and disseminate in the
environment after the termination of the
release (e.g., managing volunteer
plants); and
(F) Description of the contingency
plans associated with the release.
(d) Administrator action on permit
applications. An initial review should
generally be completed by APHIS
within 15 days of the receipt of the
application for importation or interstate
movement permits, and within 30 days
for environmental release permits. An
application will be considered complete
when the Administrator determines that
it includes all information required by
this section and any additional
information that the Administrator
determines is needed for review. If
necessary after its initial evaluation of
an application, APHIS will notify the
applicant in writing if the submitted
application information is incomplete,
and the applicant will be provided the
opportunity, without prejudice, to
revise the application information to
meet the needs for administrative
processing and scientific review. Once
the Administrator has determined that
an application is complete, the
Administrator will commence review.
The APHIS review should generally be
completed within 60 days after it is
determined to be complete for
importation and interstate movement
permits, and within 120 days after it is
determined to be complete for
environmental release permits.
(1) Administrative categories for
environmental releases. The
Administrator will use the following
categories to efficiently administer the
program and tailor regulatory oversight
in a manner that is commensurate with
risk. Environmental releases of GE
plants are assigned to one of four
categories (A–D), using the factors
described in (i–iv). A fifth category (E)
is for environmental releases of all nonplant organisms; applications in this
category will be reviewed on a case-bycase basis.
(i) Initial sorting into categories. The
Administrator will use the following
factors to initially sort environmental
releases into administrative categories.
(A) Persistence of the nonmodified
plant, ranked as follows:
(1) Low: Populations of the recipient
plant are unlikely to persist in the
environment without human
intervention, and the recipient plant has
no interfertile wild relatives in the
United States.
(2) Moderate: Populations of the
recipient plant are known to be weakly
persistent in the environment without
human intervention, or the recipient
plant has interfertile wild relatives in
the United States.
(3) High: Populations of the recipient
plant are known to be strongly
persistent in the environment without
human intervention, or the recipient
plant has interfertile wild relatives in
the United States which are aggressive
colonizers.
(4) Severe: The recipient plant is a
Federally-listed noxious weed or is
known to be similarly aggressive in its
60041
ability to colonize and persist in the
environment without human
intervention.
(B) Potential harm or damage of the
engineered traits, ranked as follows:
(1) Low: Any new proteins or
substances produced are unlikely to be
toxic or otherwise cause serious harm to
humans, vertebrate animals, or
invertebrate organisms upon
consumption of or contact with the
plant or plant parts; and
(i) No morphological changes which
could cause mechanical injury or
damage; and
(ii) Introduced sequences are known
not to result in plant disease, and
confers no or very low increased disease
susceptibility.
(2) Moderate: Any new proteins or
substances produced are unlikely to be
toxic or otherwise cause serious harm to
humans or vertebrate animals upon
consumption of or contact with the
plant or plant; or
(i) Novel resistance to the application
of an herbicide; or
(ii) Novel ability to cause mechanical
injury or damage; or
(iii) Produces proteins or substances
that are associated with plant disease
that are not prevalent or endemic in the
area of release, or that confer an
increased susceptibility to disease.
(3) High: Any new proteins or
substances produced may be toxic or to
otherwise cause serious harm to humans
or vertebrate animals, upon
consumption of or contact with the
plant or plant parts; or
(i) Produces an infectious entity
which can cause disease in plants.
(4) Severe: Any new proteins or
substances produced are known or
likely to be highly toxic or fatal to
humans or vertebrate animals, upon
consumption of or contact with the
plant or plant parts.
(C) Environmental releases will be
initially sorted into administrative
categories A–D as shown in Table 1,
based upon the persistence risk and
potential harm described in paragraphs
(d)(1)(i)(A) and (B) of this section.
TABLE 1 TO § 340.2(d)(1)—INITIAL SORTING INTO PERMIT ADMINISTRATIVE CATEGORIES (A, B, C, AND D) FOR ENVIRONMENTAL RELEASES OF GE PLANTS, BASED UPON PERSISTENCE RISK OF THE RECIPIENT PLANT SPECIES AND POTENTIAL HARM OR DAMAGE OF THE ENGINEERED TRAIT
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Potential harm or damage of engineered trait
Persistence *
Low
Moderate
High
Severe
A
A
B
A
B
B
C
C
C
D
D
D
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Low ..................................................................................................................................
Moderate ..........................................................................................................................
High ..................................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60042
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 1 TO § 340.2(d)(1)—INITIAL SORTING INTO PERMIT ADMINISTRATIVE CATEGORIES (A, B, C, AND D) FOR ENVIRONMENTAL RELEASES OF GE PLANTS, BASED UPON PERSISTENCE RISK OF THE RECIPIENT PLANT SPECIES AND POTENTIAL HARM OR DAMAGE OF THE ENGINEERED TRAIT—Continued
Potential harm or damage of engineered trait
Persistence *
Low
Severe ..............................................................................................................................
Moderate
High
Severe
D
D
D
D
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
* Persistence risk of the recipient plant species.
(2) Modification of initial sorting
based upon additional considerations.
Following initial sorting using the
factors described in paragraph (1)(i) of
this section, the Administrator may
reassign the environmental release to a
different category based upon one or
more of the following factors:
(i) How the recipient plant is used;
(ii) Whether the added trait
significantly alters the persistence risk
of the GE plant;
(iii) Whether the gene function is
known and based upon empirical
observation of the added trait in the
same species; and
(iv) Any other information the
Administrator deems relevant to the risk
of introduction or dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed.
(3) APHIS review and assignment of
permit conditions. The Administrator
will conduct a review and assign
appropriate permit conditions so that
the proposed activity will be conducted
in a manner that makes it unlikely to
result in the introduction and
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed.
(4) State or tribal review and
comment. The Administrator will
submit for notice and review a copy of
the permit application and any permit
conditions to the appropriate state or
tribal regulatory official. Comments
received from the state or tribal
regulatory official may be considered by
the Administrator prior to permit
issuance.
(5) Site inspection. Prior to and after
permit issuance, an inspector may
inspect the sites or the means of
conveyance associated with the
proposed importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment. The responsible person
must allow any such inspections.
(6) Issuance of a permit. The
Administrator may issue a permit if the
Administrator concludes that the
actions allowed under the permit are
unlikely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed.
(i) Prior to the issuance of a permit,
the responsible person must agree in
writing, in a manner prescribed by the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
Administrator, that the responsible
person and all agents of the responsible
person will comply with the permit
conditions. The Administrator will deny
the permit application if the responsible
person does not agree that both the
responsible person and all of his or her
agents will comply with all of the
permit conditions.
(ii) If a permit is issued, the permit
will include specific permit conditions
required by the Administrator in
accordance with § 340.3. If a permit is
denied, within a reasonable time
thereafter the applicant will be informed
in writing of the reasons why the permit
was denied and will be given the
opportunity to appeal the denial in
accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (g) of this section.
(e) Denial or revocation of a permit.
Permits may be denied or revoked in
accordance with this paragraph.
(1) Denial. The Administrator may
deny an application for a permit if:
(i) The Administrator cannot
conclude based on the application that
the actions proposed under the permit
are unlikely to result in introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed; or
(ii) The Administrator receives
information apart from the application
that precludes a conclusion by the
Administrator that the actions proposed
under the permit would be unlikely to
result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed; or
(iii) The Administrator determines
that the responsible person or any agent
of the responsible person has failed to
comply at any time with any provision
of this part. This would include failure
to comply with the conditions of any
permit issued.
(2) Revocation. The Administrator
may revoke a permit if:
(i) The Administrator receives
information subsequent to issuing a
permit and makes a determination based
upon this information that the
circumstances have changed such that
actions under the permit would be
likely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed; or
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
(ii) The Administrator determines that
the responsible person or any agent of
the responsible person has failed to
comply at any time with any provision
of this part. This would include failure
to comply with the conditions of any
permit issued.
(f) Notice of revocation. The
Administrator may revoke, either orally
or in writing, any permit which has
been issued. If the revocation is oral, the
Administrator will communicate the
revocation and the reasons for it in
writing as promptly as circumstances
allow.
(g) Appeal of denial or revocation of
permit. Any person who has been
denied a permit or had a permit revoked
may appeal the decision in writing to
the Administrator within ten days after
receiving the written notification of the
revocation or denial. The appeal shall
state all of the facts and reasons upon
which the person relies to assert that the
permit was wrongfully revoked or
denied. The Administrator will grant or
deny the appeal, in writing, stating the
reasons for the decision as promptly as
circumstances allow. Upon request of
the applicant, a hearing may be held to
resolve any conflict as to any material
fact. Rules of practice concerning such
a hearing will be adopted by the
Administrator. This administrative
remedy must be exhausted before a
person can file suit in court challenging
the denial or revocation of a permit.
(h) Amendment or transfer of permits.
Permits issued under this part may only
be amended or transferred in
accordance with this section.
(1) Amendment at responsible
person’s request. Where circumstances
have changed so that a responsible
person desires to have the permit
amended, such responsible person must
submit a written justification and
provide supporting information to
APHIS. The Administrator will review
the amendment request, and may amend
the permit. Prior to issuance of an
amended permit, the responsible person
must agree in writing that he or she and
all of his or her agents will comply with
the amended permit and conditions.
(2) Amendment initiated by APHIS.
The Administrator may amend any
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
permit and its conditions at any time,
upon determining that the amendment
is needed to make it unlikely that
actions under the permit would result in
the introduction or dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed, or to ensure
that the permit is in compliance with all
of the requirements of this part. As soon
as circumstances allow, the
Administrator will notify the
responsible person in writing of the
amendment to the permit and the
reason(s) for it. The responsible person
must agree in writing to comply with
the permit and conditions as amended
before the Administrator will issue the
amended permit. If the responsible
person does not agree in writing to
comply with the amended permit and
conditions, the existing permit will be
revoked.
(3) Transfer of permits. Permits issued
through this part may only be
transferred by the Administrator in
response to a request by both the
responsible person and the proposed
transferee, or in the case of a deceased
responsible person, the deceased
responsible person’s legal representative
and the proposed transferee. Such
transfer may occur if the Administrator
determines that:
(i) The proposed transferee meets all
of the qualifications of a responsible
person under this part;
(ii) The proposed transferee has
provided adequate written assurances to
the Administrator that the proposed
transferee and all of his or her agents
will meet the terms and conditions of
the permit, including any outstanding
mitigation requirements or
commitments under this part, and that
the proposed transferee agrees to
assume all responsibility and liability
associated with permit activities and
responsibilities; and
(iii) The proposed transferee has
provided such other information as the
Administrator determines is necessary
to the processing of the request for
transfer of permit.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
§ 340.3
Permit conditions.
(a) Core permit conditions. Permits
will be issued with the permit
conditions below, which are a minimum
set of basic conditions. The
Administrator may add additional or
expanded conditions when necessary to
make it unlikely that actions under the
permit would result in the introduction
or dissemination of a plant pest or
noxious weed.
(1) Permit conditions for all permit
types.
(i) Identity. The identity of the GE
organism shall be maintained at all
times, in order to maintain control of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
the GE organism, keep it distinct from
other organisms, and minimize
unintended mixing of the GE organism
with other organisms. Conditions for
maintaining the identity of the GE
organism include, but are not limited to:
(A) Marking, labeling, or otherwise
identifying all GE organisms during the
course of the permit; and
(B) Having the ability to account for
all GE materials associated with the
permit.
(ii) Communication and training. The
responsible person shall effectively
communicate any and all conditions,
activities, actions, and contingency
plans associated with the permit to all
his or her agents and any other persons
participating in permit-related activities,
in order to ensure all persons comply
with all requirements under this part.
Conditions for communicating and
training include, but are not limited to:
(A) Establishing, implementing, and
maintaining the means to effectively
communicate to all his or her agents and
any other persons participating in
permit-related activities;
(B) Providing a copy of the permit and
conditions to all agents involved in a
permit; and
(C) Training all agents and any other
persons participating in permit-related
activities to effectively conduct tasks
required under the permit.
(iii) Records. In addition to any other
records required by this section or
§ 340.7(b), records, related to permitted
activities of sufficient quality and
completeness to demonstrate
compliance with all permit conditions
and requirements under this part, must
be maintained.
(iv) Notice. The responsible person
shall notify APHIS orally within 24
hours of discovery, and subsequently in
writing within 5 business days of
discovery, in the event of an
unauthorized importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment of a GE organism regulated
under this part.
(2) Additional permit conditions for
interstate movement permits,
importation permits, and environmental
release permits which include either an
interstate movement or importation.
(i) Shipment. The GE organism must
be transported in such a way as to
minimize the likelihood of the
unauthorized release of the GE
organism. Conditions include, but are
not limited to:
(A) Ensuring that the GE organism is
transported in such a way that it is a
secure shipment, as defined in § 340.1;
and
(B) Treating or disposing of all
packaging material, shipping containers,
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60043
and any other material accompanying
the GE organism in such a manner as to
make it unlikely to result in the
organism’s unauthorized importation,
interstate movement, or release into the
environment.
(ii) Records. In addition to any other
records required by this section or
§ 340.7(b), the following records shall be
maintained:
(A) Information identifying the
general nature and quantity of the
organism being shipped;
(B) Name and address of sender,
owner, or person shipping the organism;
(C) Name, address, and telephone
number of recipient;
(D) Any invoices, packing lists, or
bills of lading used for the shipment;
(E) The shipper’s name and
identifying shipper’s mark and number;
and
(F) A description of any containers
that were used to transport the GE
organisms, and a copy of any label used
on these containers during transport.
(3) Additional permit conditions for
import permits, and environmental
release permits which include
importation.
(i) Port(s) of Entry. The GE organism
shall be presented for entry only at a
port(s) specified in the permit.
(ii) Records. In addition to any other
records required by this section or
§ 340.7(b), the responsible person shall
maintain records that identify the
country and locality where the GE
organism was collected, developed,
manufactured, reared, cultivated or
cultured.
(4) Additional permit conditions for
environmental release permits.
(i) Environmental release controls.
Sufficient controls shall be applied
during the environmental release of the
GE organism to make it unlikely to
result in the unauthorized release of the
GE organism into the environment.
Conditions include, but are not limited
to:
(A) Taking adequate precautions as
described in the permit to ensure that
the GE organism is not inadvertently
released in transit between contained
facilities and the location of
environmental release;
(B) Developing and being prepared to
implement a written contingency plan
to respond to any unauthorized
environmental release;
(C) Following any and all required
reproductive, cultural, spatial, and
temporal controls, such as isolation
distances, buffer zones, and flower
removal, as described in the permit, and
monitor to ensure that the controls are
maintained throughout the duration of
the release;
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60044
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(D) Cleaning equipment used in the
environmental release in order to
remove or devitalize any viable GE
organism the equipment may carry, as
described in the permit;
(E) Devitalizing or moving into a
contained facility any viable GE
material remaining at the termination of
the environmental release, when
applicable, as described in the permit;
and
(F) Managing and monitoring the area
of release after the termination of the
environmental release and removing or
devitalizing any GE organisms which
persist after the release, as required in
the permit.
(ii) Records. In addition to any other
records required by this section or
§ 340.7(b), the following records shall be
maintained for each release:
(A) All protocols or guidelines used to
direct any environmental release of the
GE organism; and
(B) All environmental release reports
for the organism. At a minimum such
reports must include the APHIS
reference number for the environmental
release, methods of observation used
during the environmental release,
resulting information, and analysis
regarding all deleterious effects on
plants, nontarget organisms, or the
environment, and any notices sent to
APHIS of any unusual occurrence
during the environmental release.
(iii) Reports and Notices. In order for
the Administrator to monitor the
progress of the environmental release,
and to evaluate compliance with
required permit conditions, permit
conditions will include, but are not
limited to:
(A) The responsible person shall
submit periodic reports and notices to
APHIS at the times specified in the
permit and containing the information
specified within the permit; and
(B) The responsible person shall
notify APHIS orally within 24 hours of
discovery, and subsequently in writing
within 5 business days of discovery, in
the event that the GE organism is found
to have characteristics substantially
different from those listed in the permit
or if any circumstances occur which
may increase the risk of disseminating
a plant pest or noxious weed.
(C) The responsible person shall
notify APHIS in writing if the
authorized release will not be
conducted.
(D) Within 28 days after the initiation
of the release, the responsible person
shall report to APHIS in writing the
final release site coordinates; number of
GE organisms actually released; any
information related to the expected
date(s) and quantities of GE organisms
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
for subsequent planned releases to be
done under this permit.
(E) The responsible person shall
provide APHIS with a final report that
includes information related to any
occurrences during the release that
might result in the dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed.
(F) For categories C and D, permit
holders shall provide APHIS with
written notice no less than seven days
prior to the planned initiation of the
release.
(G) For categories C and D, permit
holders shall provide APHIS with a
report no less than 21 days prior to
release termination (e.g., harvest of GE
plants) that describes the anticipated
date(s) of termination.
(b) Standard for additional permit
conditions assigned by Administrator.
The Administrator will assign the
permit conditions described above in a
manner that is commensurate with the
risk of the individual proposed release.
Additional or expanded permit
conditions may include, but are not
limited to specific requirements for:
Reproductive, cultural, spatial, temporal
controls; monitoring; post-termination
land use; site security or access
restrictions; and management practices
such as training of personnel involved
in the release. The Administrator may
also assign permit conditions addressing
nonliving materials associated with or
derived from GE plants when such
conditions are needed to make it
unlikely that the nonliving materials
would pose a noxious weed risk.
§ 340.4 Conditional exemptions from the
requirement for a permit for interstate
movement.
(a) General. Certain GE organisms
described in paragraph (b) of this
section may be moved interstate without
a permit under this part, if they meet the
shipping conditions enumerated in
paragraph (c).
(b) Conditional exemptions from the
requirement for a permit for interstate
movement of certain organisms. A
permit for interstate movement will not
be required for the following genetically
engineered organisms provided that
they meet the requirements of this
paragraph and paragraph (c).
(1) Escherichia coli genotype K–12
(strain K–12 and its derivatives), sterile
strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or
asporogenic strains of Bacillus subtilis,
provided that the introduced genetic
sequences:
(i) Are maintained on a
nonconjugation proficient plasmid, and
the organism does not contain other
conjugation proficient plasmids or
generalized transducing phages;
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
(ii) Do not cause the production of an
infectious entity;
(iii) Are not carried on an expression
vector if the cloned genes code for:
(A) A toxin to plants or plant
products, or a toxin to organisms
beneficial to plants; or
(B) Other factors directly involved in
eliciting plant disease (e.g., cell wall
degrading enzymes; or
(C) Substances acting as, or inhibitory
to, plant growth regulators.
(2) Arabidopsis thaliana provided that
the introduced genetic sequences:
(i) Do not cause the production of an
infectious entity;
(ii) Are not derived from an animal or
human pathogen;
(iii) Do not encode products that are
toxic to vertebrates;
(iv) Do not encode products known to
or likely to be causal agents of disease
in vertebrates; and
(v) Do not encode products intended
for pharmaceutical or industrial use.
(c) Shipping conditions. Organisms
that meet the criteria described in
paragraph (b) of this section must be
shipped as follows:
(i) The container and means of
conveyance must provide secure
shipment to make it unlikely that the
introduction or dissemination of the
organisms will occur while in transit.
(ii) The container must contain a
document which includes the following
written information:
(A) Names and contact details for the
sender and recipient, and
(B) A statement that the contents are
genetically engineered and are eligible
for interstate movement without permit
under this part, but are not exempt from
permit requirements under this part if
the organism is imported or released
into the environment;
(iii) The responsible person shall
notify APHIS orally within 24 hours of
discovery, and subsequently in writing
within 5 business days of discovery, in
the event of an unauthorized release
into the environment of a GE organism
regulated under this part.
(d) Revocation of an exemption from
requirement for permit. The
Administrator may revoke any existing
conditional exemption. The
Administrator may revoke a conditional
exemption if the Administrator receives
information subsequent to approving
the conditional exemption and makes a
determination based upon this
information that the circumstances have
changed such that the conditional
exemption is likely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed. The revocation,
its effective date, and the reasons for it
will be published in the Federal
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Register. A revocation may not be
appealed. However, any person may file
a new petition in accordance with
§ 340.5 regarding the same or similar
organisms covered by the revocation if
new information relevant to the
revocation becomes available.
(e) Revocation of a person’s use of a
conditional exemption from
requirement for permit. The
Administrator may revoke the right of
any person to use a conditional
exemption from the requirement for a
permit under this part after determining
that the person or any agent of the
person has failed to comply at any time
with any provision of this part. This
would include failure to comply with
the conditions of any permit or
exemption.
(1) Appeal of revocation of a person’s
use of a conditional exemption. Any
person who has had the right to use a
conditional exemption revoked may
appeal the decision in writing to the
Administrator within ten days after
receiving the written notification of the
revocation. The appeal shall state all of
the facts and reasons upon which the
person relies to assert that the use of the
conditional exemption was wrongfully
revoked. The Administrator will grant
or deny the appeal, in writing, stating
the reasons for the decision as promptly
as circumstances allow. Upon request of
the applicant, a hearing may be held to
resolve any conflict as to any material
fact. Rules of practice concerning such
a hearing will be adopted by the
Administrator. This administrative
remedy must be exhausted before a
person can file suit in court challenging
the revocation.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
§ 340.5 Petition for new conditional
exemptions from the requirement for a
permit.
(a) General. Any person may petition
to initiate the procedure for establishing
a new conditional exemption from the
requirement for a permit under
§ 340.0(b)(1) of this part. The
Administrator may initiate the
procedure without filing a petition. All
petitions and all actions by the
Administrator to establish a new
conditional exemption will be evaluated
according to the standards for petition
approval or denial contained in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(b) Petition submission and
evaluation procedure. To petition for a
new conditional exemption from the
requirement for a permit under this part,
a petitioner must submit a written
petition to the Administrator.
(1) The petition must contain
information that supports a conclusion
that use of the conditional exemption is
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
unlikely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. The information shall include the
following:
(i) Description of the biology of the
organism prior to genetic engineering.
(ii) Detailed description of the genetic
changes made to the organism.
(iii) Detailed description of the
phenotype of the GE organism,
including known and potential
differences from the recipient organism
that could change the likelihood that the
GE organism will pose a risk as a plant
pest or noxious weed. Examples of
relevant information include, but are
not limited to:
(A) Growth habit and reproduction of
the GE organism;
(B) Potential host range or geographic
area of distribution;
(C) Potential for other organisms to
pose risks as plant pests or noxious
weeds if they acquire the trait from the
GE organism (e.g. via sexual
reproduction, horizontal gene transfer);
(D) Susceptibility of the GE organism
to disease or damage by pests;
(E) Pathogenicity of the GE organism
and/or ability of the GE organism to
cause damage or injury to plants or
plant parts;
(F) Toxicity, allergenicity, and/or
ability of the GE organism to damage or
injure other organisms;
(iv) A detailed description of
proposed condition(s) to be associated
with the exemption and how the
conditions would make the exemption
unlikely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed.
(v) Any relevant experimental
information, published references, or
scientific information which support the
conclusions of the petition;
(vi) All reports required under
§ 340.3;
(vi) Any information known to the
petitioner that the GE organism may
pose a risk as a plant pest or noxious
weed;
(vii) Any other information that the
Administrator believes to be relevant to
a determination that the proposed
conditional exemption from the
requirement for a permit for the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of the GE
organism is unlikely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed.
(viii) A signed certification by the
petitioner that, to the best knowledge
and belief of the petitioner, the petition
includes all information on which to
base a determination, and that it
includes all information known to the
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60045
petitioner which is unfavorable to the
petition.
(2) Insufficient information. If, upon
initial review of the petition, the
Administrator concludes that there is
insufficient information upon which to
make a determination on the petition,
the petitioner will be sent a written
notice indicating what additional
information may be required.
(3) Public notice. The Administrator
should generally complete the review of
the complete petition within 180 days,
then publish a notice in the Federal
Register of the availability of documents
related to APHIS’ assessment of the
proposed conditional exemption. This
notice will specify that comments will
be accepted from the public on the
proposal.
(4) Petition approval or denial
standard. The Administrator will assess
the GE organism and the conditions of
the requested exemption to determine
whether the requested exemption from
a permit for importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment would be unlikely to result
in the introduction or dissemination of
a plant pest or noxious weed. The
Administrator will also consider
whether any conditions not contained
in the petition would be needed to
ensure that the requested exemption
would be unlikely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed. After completing
review of the available information and
any public comments received on it, the
Administrator will furnish to the
petitioner and publish in the Federal
Register one of the following responses:
(i) Approve a conditional exemption
from requirement for a permit. The
approval of a conditional exemption
from the requirement for a permit will
state which GE organism(s) may be
imported, moved interstate, and/or
environmentally released without a
permit under this part, as well as the
conditions relevant to the exemption.
The Administrator may also add
additional conditions not proposed in
the petition, if the Administrator
concludes that additional conditions are
needed to ensure that the conditional
exemption would be unlikely to result
in the introduction or dissemination of
a plant pest or noxious weed.
(ii) Deny a conditional exemption
from requirement for a permit. The
Administrator will deny a petition if the
Administrator cannot conclude that the
proposed exemption would be unlikely
to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. The Administrator’s written
decision will set forth the reason for the
denial.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
60046
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(c) Appeal of decision. Any person
whose petition under § 340.5 has been
denied may appeal the decision in
writing to the Administrator within ten
days after receiving the written
notification of the decision. The appeal
shall state all of the facts and reasons
upon which the person relies to show
that the decision should be changed.
The Administrator will grant or deny
the appeal, in writing, stating the
reasons for the decision as promptly as
circumstances allow. Upon request of
the applicant, a hearing may be held to
resolve any conflict as to any material
fact. Rules of practice concerning such
a hearing will be adopted by the
Administrator. This administrative
remedy must be exhausted before a
person can file suit in court challenging
the decision.
(d) Amending an exemption after
approval. The Administrator may
amend conditions to any conditional
exemption approved under this section.
The Administrator may amend a
conditional exemption if the
Administrator determines based on
information received subsequent to the
approval of the exemption that the
exemption needs to be amended to
ensure that the exemption would be
unlikely to result in the introduction or
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed, and that additional conditions
can successfully mitigate that risk. The
Administrator may also amend a
conditional exemption if needed to
ensure that the exemption is in
compliance with all of the requirements
of this part. The amended conditional
exemption and the reasons for it will be
published in the Federal Register. The
addition of conditions may not be
appealed. However, any person may file
a new petition in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section regarding
the same or similar organisms covered
by the amended exemption if new
information relevant to the amended
exemption becomes available.
(e) Revocation of an exemption from
requirement for permit. The
Administrator may revoke any
conditional exemption under this
section. The Administrator may revoke
a conditional exemption if the
Administrator receives information
subsequent to approving the exemption
and makes a determination based upon
this information that the circumstances
have changed such that the conditional
exemption is likely to result in the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed. The revocation,
its effective date, and the reasons for it
will be published in the Federal
Register. A revocation may not be
appealed. However, any person may file
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
a new petition in accordance with this
section regarding the same or similar
organisms covered by the revocation if
new information relevant to the
revocation becomes available.
(f) Revocation of a person’s use of a
conditional exemption from
requirement for permit. The
Administrator may revoke the right of
any person to use a conditional
exemption from the requirement for a
permit under this part after determining
that the person or any agent of the
person has failed to comply at any time
with any provision of this part. This
would include failure to comply with
the conditions of any permit or
exemption.
(1) Appeal of revocation of a person’s
use of a conditional exemption. Any
person who has had the right to use a
conditional exemption revoked may
appeal the decision in writing to the
Administrator within ten days after
receiving the written notification of the
revocation. The appeal shall state all of
the facts and reasons upon which the
person relies to assert that the use of the
exemption was wrongfully revoked. The
Administrator will grant or deny the
appeal, in writing, stating the reasons
for the decision as promptly as
circumstances allow. Upon request of
the applicant, a hearing may be held to
resolve any conflict as to any material
fact. Rules of practice concerning such
a hearing will be adopted by the
Administrator. This administrative
remedy must be exhausted before a
person can file suit in court challenging
the revocation.
(2) [Reserved]
§ 340.6
Petition for nonregulated status.
(a) General. Any person may petition
to initiate the procedure for approving
nonregulated status under this part for
a GE organism. The Administrator may
initiate the procedure without filing a
petition. All petitions and all actions by
the Administrator to initiate the
procedure for approving nonregulated
status will be evaluated according to the
standards for petition approval or denial
contained in paragraph (b)(4) of this
section.
(b) Petition submission and
evaluation procedure. To petition for
approval of nonregulated status, a
petitioner must submit a written
petition to the Administrator.
(1) The petition must contain
information that supports a conclusion
that the GE organism is unlikely to be
a plant pest or noxious weed. The
information shall include the following:
(i) Description of the biology of the
organism prior to genetic engineering.
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
(ii) Detailed description of the genetic
changes made to the organism.
(iii) Detailed description of the
phenotype of the GE organism,
including known and potential
differences from the recipient organism
that could change the likelihood that the
GE organism is unlikely to be a plant
pest or noxious weed. Examples of
relevant information include, but are
not limited to:
(A) Growth habit and reproduction of
the GE organism;
(B) Potential host range or geographic
area of distribution;
(C) Potential for other organisms to
pose risks as plant pests or noxious
weeds if they acquire the trait from the
GE organism (e.g. via sexual
reproduction, horizontal gene transfer);
(D) Susceptibility of the GE organism
to disease or damage by pests;
(E) Pathogenicity of the GE organism
and/or ability of the GE organism to
cause damage or injury to plants or
plant parts;
(F) Toxicity, allergenicity, and/or
ability of the GE organism to damage or
injure other organisms;
(iv) Any relevant experimental
information, published references, or
scientific information which support the
conclusions of the petition;
(v) All reports required under § 340.3;
(vi) Any information known to the
petitioner that the GE organism may
pose risk as a plant pest or noxious
weed;
(vii) Any other information that the
Administrator believes to be relevant to
a determination that the GE organism is
unlikely to be a plant pest or noxious
weed.
(viii) A signed certification by the
petitioner that, to the best knowledge
and belief of the petitioner, the petition
includes all information on which to
base a determination, and that it
includes all information known to the
petitioner which is unfavorable to the
petition.
(2) Insufficient information. If, upon
initial review of the petition, the
Administrator concludes that there is
insufficient information upon which to
make a determination on the petition,
the petitioner will be sent a written
notice indicating what additional
information may be required.
(3) Public notice. The Administrator
should generally complete the review of
the complete petition within 180 days,
then publish a notice in the Federal
Register of the availability of documents
related to APHIS’ assessment of the
proposal for nonregulated status. This
notice will specify that comments will
be accepted from the public on the
proposal.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(4) Petition approval or denial
standard. The Administrator will assess
the GE organism to determine whether
the GE organism is unlikely to be a plant
pest or noxious weed. After completing
review of the available information and
any public comments received on it, the
Administrator will furnish to the
petitioner and publish in the Federal
Register one of the following responses:
(i) Approve nonregulated status. The
approval of nonregulated status will
state which GE organism(s) have been
determined to have nonregulated status.
(ii) Deny nonregulated status. The
Administrator will deny a petition if the
Administrator cannot conclude that the
GE organism is unlikely to be a plant
pest or noxious weed. The
Administrator’s written decision will set
forth the reason for the denial.
(c) Appeal of decision. Any person
whose petition under § 340.6 has been
denied may appeal the decision in
writing to the Administrator within ten
days after receiving the written
notification of the decision. The appeal
shall state all of the facts and reasons
upon which the person relies to show
that the decision should be changed.
The Administrator will grant or deny
the appeal, in writing, stating the
reasons for the decision as promptly as
circumstances allow. Upon request of
the applicant, a hearing may be held to
resolve any conflict as to any material
fact. Rules of practice concerning such
a hearing will be adopted by the
Administrator. This administrative
remedy must be exhausted before a
person can file suit in court challenging
the decision.
(d) Revocation of nonregulated status.
The Administrator may revoke any
approval of nonregulated status of a GE
organism. The Administrator may
revoke an approval of nonregulated
status if the Administrator receives
information subsequent to approving
the nonregulated status and makes a
determination based upon this
information that the circumstances have
changed such that the GE organism is
likely to be a plant pest or noxious
weed. If the Administrator revokes an
approval for nonregulated status, the
Administrator may approve for the same
GE organism an exemption from the
requirement for permit in accordance
with § 340.5. The revocation, its
effective date, and the reasons for it will
be published in the Federal Register. A
revocation may not be appealed.
However, any person may file a new
petition in accordance with this section
regarding the same or similar organisms
covered by the revocation if new
information relevant to the revocation
becomes available.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
§ 340.7 Compliance, enforcement, and
remedial action.
(a) Access for inspection. Inspectors
shall have access to inspect any relevant
premises, facility, location, storage area,
waypoint, materials, equipment, means
of conveyance, and other articles related
to importation, interstate movement,
and environmental releases of GE
organisms regulated under this part.
(b) Access to audit and review
records. Inspectors shall have access to
audit and review all records required to
be maintained under this part.
(c) Required records. Responsible
persons and their agents engaged in the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment of a GE
organism subject to the regulations of
this part are required to establish and
keep the following records.
(1) All records required as a condition
of a permit or a conditional exemption
approved under the procedure
described in § 340.5.
(2) Address and any other information
needed to identify all contained
facilities where the GE organism was
stored or utilized, and all locations
where the GE organism was released
into the environment;
(3) A record identifying which APHIS
permit, if any, authorized the
importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment;
(4) A record identifying which
exemption under this part, if any,
authorized the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the
environment; and
(5) Copies of contracts between the
responsible person and all agents that
conduct activities subject to this part for
the responsible person, and copies of
other records (e.g., e-mails, telephone
records) for such agreements made
without a written contract.
(d) Record retention. Records
indicating that such a GE organism that
was imported or moved interstate
reached its intended destination must
be retained for at least 2 years after
completion of importation or interstate
movement, and all other records must
be retained for at least 5 years after
completion of all obligations required
under a relevant permit or exemption.
(e) Enforcement. (1) Failure of any
person to comply with any of the
requirements of this part may result in
any or all of the following:
(i) Denial of a permit request by that
person;
(ii) After the issuance of a permit,
revocation of a permit and destruction,
treatment, or removal of the GE
organism, or other measures as deemed
appropriate or necessary by the
Administrator;
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
60047
(iii) Criminal and/or civil penalties,
and
(iv) Remedial or other measures as
determined appropriate and necessary
by the Administrator.
(2) The Administrator may seek a civil
penalty as well as impose and require
corrective action plans, remedial
measures or other measures as
determined appropriate and necessary
by the Administrator.
(3) Prior to the issuance of a
complaint seeking a civil penalty, the
Administrator may enter into a
stipulation in which the responsible
person agrees to take certain remedial
actions or other measures in addition to
or in lieu of a stipulated civil penalty,
in accordance with 7 CFR § 380.10.
(f) Liability for acts of an agent. For
purposes of enforcing this part, the act,
omission, or failure of any agent for a
responsible person as defined in § 340.1
of this part may be deemed also to be
the act, omission, or failure of the
responsible person.
(g) Remedial action. The
Administrator may hold, seize,
quarantine, treat, apply other remedial
measures to, destroy, or otherwise
dispose of any GE organisms subject to
this part, in order to ensure the GE
organisms are unlikely to result in the
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed. Accordingly, the Administrator
may order the responsible person for an
active or revoked permit or any other
person, through an Emergency Action
Notification or other administrative
order, to apply remedial measures to a
GE organism or means of conveyance
carrying a GE organism subject to
regulation by this part. The
Administrator’s determination of
whether or not to require or order
corrective and/or remedial action in a
given situation does not affect,
influence, restrict, or in any other way
limit the Administrator’s determination
on whether or not to seek criminal or
civil penalties or order other
compliance or enforcement
requirements as deemed necessary or
appropriate by the Administrator to the
given situation.
(1) Failure of a person to comply with
the Administrator’s order for corrective
and/or remedial action authorizes the
Administrator to take corrective and/or
remedial action and recover from the
person the costs of any care, handling,
application of remedial measures,
devitalization, or disposal incurred by
APHIS in connection with the corrective
and/or remedial actions taken.
(2) Low level presence (LLP) remedial
action. The Administrator may order
remedial action for any unauthorized
release into the environment of GE
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
60048
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 / Proposed Rules
organisms, including situations
involving a low-level mixing of GE
plants and materials subject to
regulation 1 under this part with
commercial seed and grain. In some LLP
situations the Administrator may
determine not to order remedial action,
if the Administrator determines that the
low-level mixing is unlikely to result in
the introduction or dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed. These
determinations will be made in the
same way, based on the same factors,
regardless of whether the LLP originates
domestically or is found in import
shipments that may contain organisms
subject to regulation. The factors the
Administrator will consider that would
support a decision not to order LLP
remedial action include, but are not
limited to, determinations that:
(i) A GE plant of the same species
expressing nearly identical proteins or
substances has already been approved
for nonregulated status under this part;
or
(ii) All of the following statements are
true with regard to the GE plant or
plants subject to the regulations under
this part.
(A) The function of the introduced
genetic sequences is known and its
expression in the GE plant is unlikely to
pose plant pest or noxious weed risk;
(B) Introduced genetic sequences do
not cause the production of an
infectious entity;
(C) Any genetic sequences derived
from plant viruses are non-coding
regulatory sequences of known function;
to regulation’’ may include situations
where a GE organism granted nonregulated status
subsequently had that status revoked in accordance
with § 340.6(d).
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with PROPOSALS4
1 ‘‘Subject
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:41 Oct 08, 2008
Jkt 217001
or, if sense or antisense genetic
sequences, they are derived from viruses
prevalent and endemic in the United
States that infect plants of the same host
species and do not encode a functional
noncapsid gene product responsible for
cell-to-cell movement of the virus.
(D) The GE plant is not expected to
establish outside of a managed
ecosystem, and has no sexuallycompatible, wild relatives in the United
States;
(E) The GE plant does not produce
new substances that are known or likely
to be toxic to non-target organisms, does
not contain genetic sequences from
animal or human pathogens, and does
not encode products known or likely to
be causal agents of disease in animals or
humans.
(F) If the GE plant is a food or feed
crop, then at least one of the following
must be true:
(1) The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency has established a tolerance or an
exemption from tolerance for any plantincorporated protectant expressed by
the GE plant, or
(2) Key food safety issues of the new
protein or other substance have been
addressed, or,
(3) No new protein or substance is
produced.
§ 340.8
Confidential business information.
In accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) and exemptions
from releasing information pursuant to
FOIA, namely, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4),
APHIS may exempt from disclosure to
the public trade secrets and commercial
or financial information obtained from a
person that are privileged or
confidential. Persons wishing to protect
confidential business information in
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
permit applications, petitions, or other
submissions to APHIS under this part
should do so in the following manner.
If there are portions of a document
deemed to contain trade secret or
confidential business information, each
page containing such information must
be marked ‘‘CBI Copy.’’ A second copy
of each such document must be
submitted with all such CBI deleted and
marked on each page where the CBI was
deleted: ‘‘CBI Deleted.’’ In addition,
those portions of the document which
are deemed ‘‘CBI’’ must be identified in
an attachment to the document, which
also must justify how each piece of
information requested to be treated as
CBI is a trade secret or is commercial or
financial information and are privileged
or confidential.
§ 340.9
Costs and charges.
The services of the inspector related
to carrying out this part and provided
during regularly assigned hours of duty
and at the usual places of duty will be
furnished without cost.2 The U.S.
Department of Agriculture will not be
responsible for any costs or charges
incident to inspections or compliance
with the provisions of this part, other
than for the services of the inspector.
Done in Washington, DC, this 1st day of
October 2008.
Charles D. Lambert,
Acting Under Secretary for Marketing and
Regulatory Programs.
[FR Doc. E8–23584 Filed 10–6–08; 9:30 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
2 The Department’s provisions relating to
overtime charges for an inspector’s services are set
forth in 7 CFR part 354.0.
E:\FR\FM\09OCP4.SGM
09OCP4
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 197 (Thursday, October 9, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 60008-60048]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-23584]
[[Page 60007]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part IV
Department of Agriculture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 CFR Part 340
Importation, Interstate Movement, and Release Into the Environment of
Certain Genetically Engineered Organisms; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 197 / Thursday, October 9, 2008 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 60008]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
7 CFR Part 340
[Docket No. APHIS-2008-0023]
RIN 0579-AC31
Importation, Interstate Movement, and Release Into the
Environment of Certain Genetically Engineered Organisms
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of public forums.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We propose to revise our regulations regarding the
importation, interstate movement, and environmental release of certain
genetically engineered organisms in order to bring the regulations into
alignment with provisions of the Plant Protection Act. The revisions
would also update the regulations in response to advances in genetic
science and technology and our accumulated experience in implementing
the current regulations. This is the first comprehensive review and
revision of the regulations since they were established in 1987. This
rule would affect persons involved in the importation, interstate
movement, or release into the environment of genetically engineered
plants and certain other genetically engineered organisms.
DATES: We will consider all comments that we receive on or before
November 24, 2008. We will also consider comments made at public forums
to be held in Davis, CA; Kansas City, MO; and Riverdale, MD.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov/fdmspublic/component/
main?main=DocketDetail&d=APHIS-2008-0023 to submit or view comments and
to view supporting and related materials available electronically.
Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery: Please send two copies of
your comment to Docket No. APHIS-2008-0023, Regulatory Analysis and
Development, PPD, APHIS, Station 3A-03.8, 4700 River Road Unit 118,
Riverdale, MD 20737-1238. Please state that your comment refers to
Docket No. APHIS-2008-0023.
Public Forums. Written and oral comment will be accepted
at three public forums held during the comment period. See Public
Forums below.
Reading Room: You may read any comments that we receive on this
docket in our reading room. The reading room is located in room 1141 of
the USDA South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC. Normal reading room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except holidays. To be sure someone is there to
help you, please call (202) 690-2817 before coming.
Other Information: Additional information about APHIS and its
programs is available on the Internet at https://www.aphis.usda.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Biotechnology Regulatory Services,
APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236; (301) 734-
5710.
For information about the public forums, contact: Dr. T. Clint
Nesbitt, BRS, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147, Riverdale, MD 20737-
1238; (301) 734-5673.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Forums
In order to provide additional opportunities for the public to
comment on the proposed rule, APHIS will hold public forums in three
locations: Davis, CA; Kansas City, MO; and Riverdale, MD (see Meeting
Locations below). These informal forums are designed to engage
interested individuals from the public and elicit comments related to
the proposed rule. The format will consist of informational posters and
comment stations. Attendees will be able walk through the forum during
the open hours and interact with other attendees and APHIS personnel.
Short welcoming remarks will be given by APHIS personnel at 4:30 p.m.
and again at 6 p.m. (local time), but there is no set schedule for each
poster station, so the public may come and go at any time during the
forum period. Participants will have the opportunity, if desired, to
record brief oral comments with a court reporter or to submit comments
in writing, following directions provided at the comment stations. A
transcript of the oral comments and a copy of any written comments
submitted at the public forums will be placed in the rulemaking record
and will be available for public inspection.
The purpose of these public forums is to allow the public a venue
in which to interact with APHIS representatives and to allow APHIS to
solicit further information from the public. Comments received at these
public forums will be added to this Docket.
Dates: The public forums will be held in Davis, CA, on October 28,
2008; in Kansas City, MO, on October 30, 2008; and Riverdale, MD, on
November 13, 2008. Each public forum will be held from 4 p.m. to 7
p.m., local time.
Meeting Locations: The public forums will be held at the following
locations:
USDA Riverside, Oklahoma City Memorial Conference Rooms B, C, and
D, 4700 River Road, Riverdale, MD, 20737. For directions or facilities
information, call (301) 734-8010.
Walter A. Buehler Alumni & Visitors Center, Alpha Gamma Rho Hall,
University of California, Davis, CA, 95616. For directions or
facilities information, call (530) 754-9195 or visit https://
www.alumnicenter.ucdavis.edu/.
Hilton Kansas City Airport, Shawnee Room A, 8801 NW 112th Street,
Kansas City, MO, 64153. For directions or facilities information, call
(816) 891-8900 or visit https://www.hiltonkci.com/.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. APHIS Role in Federal Regulation of Genetically Engineered
Organisms
B. Current Regulations in 7 CFR part 340
C. Plant Protection Act Authority to Regulate Plant Pests,
Noxious Weeds, and Biological Control Organisms
III. Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Regulatory Scope (Sec. 340.0 Scope and General
Restrictions)
1. Genetically Engineered Organisms Subject to 7 CFR part 340
2. Deleting the List of Organisms Which Are or Contain Plant
Pests
3. Regulating Whole Organisms, Parts, and Nonliving Products
B. Permits for Authorizing Importation, Interstate Movement, and
Release Into the Environment of Certain GE Organisms
1. Elimination of the Notification Procedure
2. Revisions to Permit Procedures
3. Permit Types and Environmental Release Categories (Sec.
340.2(b))
4. Permit Application Information Requirements (Sec. 340.2(c))
5. Permit Conditions (Sec. 340.3)
6. Elimination of Courtesy Permits
C. Conditional Exemptions from Permit Requirement (Sec. 340.4,
Sec. 340.5)
D. Petitions for Nonregulated Status (Sec. 340.6)
E. Compliance, Enforcement, and Remedial Action (Sec. 340.7)
1. Ensuring Compliance with Permits and Exemption Activities
2. Low Level Presence of Regulated GE Plants in Seed or Grain
F. Administrative Changes
1. Confidential Business Information (Sec. 340.8)
2. Time Frames for APHIS Action on Permit Applications and
Petitions
3. Duration Period for Permits
G. Definitions and Miscellaneous Changes
IV. Required Analyses
A. National Environmental Policy Act
[[Page 60009]]
B. Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Executive Order 12372
D. Executive Order 12988
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. E-Government Act Compliance
I. Introduction
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) regulates the safe introduction
(environmental release, interstate movement, and importation) of
certain genetically engineered (GE) organisms under its regulations in
7 CFR part 340. The regulations govern the introduction of GE organisms
that might be plant pests. APHIS has amended the regulations several
times in an effort to respond to the need for streamlined procedures
and has established clear procedures to remove GE organisms that do not
pose a plant pest risk from obligations under the regulation.
The APHIS regulations have been used most frequently for permits
and notifications for importation, interstate movement, or
environmental releases of GE plants, although a smaller number of
permits have been issued for GE microorganisms and insects. To date,
APHIS has authorized more than 13,000 environmental releases of GE
plants, most of which have been part of the development of improved
crop varieties for agriculture. These controlled environmental releases
are sometimes referred to as field tests or field trials, in
recognition of their relationship to field tests done in the
traditional development of plant varieties, and in this document the
terms field test or field trial should be understood to mean
environmental release. In addition to permits and notifications, APHIS
has completed reviews in response to petitions requesting nonregulated
status under these regulations. To date, APHIS has granted 74
determinations of nonregulated status, and all of these have been for
GE plants (more information about these is posted at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/brs/not_reg.html ). Many of these plants have since
been used to develop plant varieties that have become part of the
options that growers have for agricultural production in the United
States and other countries. The APHIS determinations of nonregulated
status have been for the GE plant(s) and their progeny. The GE plant
with nonregulated status can be used subsequently in plant breeding
programs or in agriculture just like other plant lines. A GE plant that
has received nonregulated status can be bred with another GE plant with
nonregulated status, and the resulting progeny which could contain
multiple GE traits still retains nonregulated status.
The bulk of APHIS-authorized introductions have been crop plants
bearing genes which confer resistance to certain insects or tolerance
to certain herbicides. Although the current program has been effective
in ensuring the safe environmental release, interstate movement, and
importation of certain genetically engineered organisms, technological
advances have led to new uses and questions about how the current
regulations and APHIS authorities will be used to maintain appropriate
oversight. Advances in technology have created possibilities for new
and different traits, such as those that would produce a compound for
pharmaceutical or industrial use. In addition, researchers have been
producing organisms that may not fall under the scope of our current
regulations and are also beginning to focus more on perennial plants,
such as grasses or trees, which may be capable of establishing and
persisting outside the site of introduction.
APHIS is proposing to revise its regulations in order to respond to
emerging trends in biotechnology, to address the current and future
needs of the agency, to continue to ensure a high level of
environmental protection, to improve regulatory processes so that they
are more transparent to stakeholders and the public, to more
efficiently use agency resources and to eliminate unnecessary
regulatory burdens.
Given the diversity of U.S. agriculture, the USDA Advisory
Committee on Biotechnology and 21st Century Agriculture recently in its
March 2008 consensus report encouraged the continuing support of
coexistence among various agricultural production systems in U.S.
agriculture. APHIS concludes that the changes it is proposing will
continue to support coexistence in U.S. agriculture.
In addition, APHIS is proposing changes to the regulations to
reflect provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill recently enacted. Section
10204 of Title X of the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008
(Farm Bill) requires the Secretary of Agriculture to take action on
each issue identified in the document entitled ``Lessons Learned and
Revisions under Consideration for APHIS' Biotechnology Framework,'' and
where appropriate, promulgate regulations. APHIS is proposing certain
regulatory changes concerning permit application information
requirements, permit conditions, records, and reports that address many
of the considerations outlined in Section 10204.
APHIS is also aligning this proposed rule with recommendations
arising from the 2005 audit of the USDA Office of Inspector General
entitled ``Controls Over Issuance of Genetically Engineered Release
Permits.''
II. Background
A. APHIS Role in Federal Regulation of Genetically Engineered Organisms
Under the Coordinated Federal Framework for Regulation of
Biotechnology,\1\ USDA works with the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ensure that the
development and testing of biotechnology products occur in a manner
that is safe for plant and animal health, human health, and the
environment. USDA and EPA are the agencies responsible for protecting
U.S. agriculture and the environment. EPA is responsible for the human
health, animal health, and environmental safety issues raised by any
pesticidal substance produced in genetically engineered (GE) organisms.
FDA has authority over the safety of the whole food product other than
the pesticidal components regulated by EPA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Coordinated Framework is described in a notice published
in the Federal Register on June 26, 1986 (51 FR 23302). The notice
may be viewed at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/brs/fedregister/
coordinated_framework.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Current Regulations in 7 CFR Part 340
APHIS administers regulations in 7 CFR part 340, ``Introduction of
Organisms and Products Altered or Produced Through Genetic Engineering
Which are Plant Pests or Which There is Reason to Believe are Plant
Pests'' (referred to below as the regulations). The current regulations
govern the introduction (importation, interstate movement, or release
into the environment) of certain GE organisms termed ``regulated
articles.'' Regulated articles are essentially GE organisms which might
pose a risk as a plant pest.
APHIS first promulgated these regulations in 1987 under the
authority of the Federal Plant Pest Act of 1957 (FPPA) and the Plant
Quarantine Act of 1912 (PQA), two acts that were subsumed into the
Plant Protection Act (PPA, 7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) in 2000, along with
other provisions.
Under the current regulations, a GE organism is a regulated article
if it is a plant pest or if the Administrator has reason to believe it
is a plant pest; more specifically:
[[Page 60010]]
``if the donor organism, recipient organism, or vector or vector
agent belongs to any genera or taxa designated in Sec. 340.2 and
meets the definition of plant pest, or is an unclassified organism
and/or an organism whose classification is unknown, or any product
which contains such an organism, or any other organism or product
altered or produced through genetic engineering which the
Administrator determines is a plant pest or has reason to believe is
a plant pest.'' (Definition of regulated article, Sec. 340.1)
In other words, APHIS regulates the introduction (importation,
interstate movement, and environmental release) of GE organisms if (1)
any of the recipient, genetic donor, or vector organisms are plant
pests or of unknown classification or (2) the Administrator has
determined or has reason to believe the GE organism is a plant pest. As
constructed the regulations apply to GE microorganisms, insects, and
other traditional types of plant pests and to any GE plants if plant
pest organisms (bacterial and viral plant pathogens) are the donor
organisms and vector agents used in the creation of these GE plants.
Taxa containing ``known plant pests'' are those listed in current
Sec. 340.2. Current regulations also include a petition procedure
(Sec. 340.5) which allows petitioners to ask APHIS to add or subtract
taxa from the list in Sec. 340.2. That list has not been amended since
it was established in 1987.
As defined under the current regulations and the PPA, most plants
are not plant pests, with the exception of a few parasitic plant
species, such as striga, witchweed, and dodder.
The primary procedure for regulation under the PPA is the issuance
of a permit, which is an authorization by the Secretary to move plants,
plant products, biological control organisms, plant pests, noxious
weeds, or articles under conditions prescribed by the Secretary. The
PPA also authorizes the Secretary to determine which classes of the
above articles must have a permit to be moved. Conditions associated
with those permits can be tailored to achieve the appropriate level of
regulatory control to make it unlikely that actions under the permit
would result in the introduction or dissemination of a plant pest or
noxious weed.
APHIS currently uses a permit and notification system to authorize
importation, interstate movement and release into the environment
(currently referred to as ``introductions'') of certain GE organisms.
Under the current regulations, all regulated articles are eligible for
the permitting procedure, but only certain plants are eligible for the
notification procedure. Currently, most regulated GE plants are
introduced under notification, which is a streamlined procedure.
Examples of GE plants introduced under the notification procedure are
those GE plants altered to be resistant to certain insects or
herbicides. GE plants that do not meet the notification eligibility
criteria and all other GE organisms, such as microbes and insects, must
be introduced under the permit procedure in current Sec. 340.4. In
recent years, APHIS has processed most notifications and permits
through its electronic, e-permitting system that is accessible by the
internet at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/learn_epermits.shtml.
In making a regulatory determination for a permit or notification
for a GE organism subject to the part 340 regulations, APHIS makes such
a determination on whether the actions under notification or permit are
unlikely to result in the introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest. This determination takes into account various risk factors,
including, among other things, a low risk that the GE organism or its
progeny can persist, reproduce, and establish without human assistance.
Other risk factors that would support an ``unlikely'' determination
would be minimal availability of suitable hosts or habitats for the
organism and low risk that the organism may cause damage to plants and
plant products.
Regarding the risk of introduction or dissemination of the GE
organism as a plant pest, an ``unlikely'' determination takes into
consideration both the nature of the organism (i.e., low risk that the
organism or its progeny can persist, reproduce, establish, and spread
without human assistance) and any additional mitigations that are
placed upon the organism that restrict its movement and make its
unauthorized introduction or dissemination unlikely.
The notification procedure was first added to the regulations in
1993, and then amended in 1997 to allow a broader range of plant
species to be eligible for the procedure. The notification procedure
was designed to be a streamlined procedure with the eligibility
criteria and performance standards already built into the regulations.
Over the past decade, APHIS has typically authorized 700-1200
notifications per year.
As part of the notification procedure, applicants must adhere to
performance standards set forth by APHIS for proper confinement of the
GE plants. The goal of proper confinement is to ensure that the GE
plants do not persist in the environment. Under the notification
procedure applicants provide information about the introduction
sufficient for APHIS to evaluate eligibility for the procedure and
impacts on the environment. This information includes information on
the plant species, introduced gene(s), location(s), and anticipated
time frame for the introduction.
For notifications, the eligibility criteria and the performance
standards stated in the regulations must be met, but APHIS does not
prescribe how the performance standards must be met. For example, one
of the performance standards in Sec. 340.3(c)(5) requires that ``The
field trial must be conducted such that (i) The regulated article will
not persist in the environment, and (ii) No offspring can be produced
that could persist in the environment.'' The responsible person might
meet this standard in a field trial by isolating the regulated GE
plants at a sufficient distance to preclude gene flow from the GE plant
to sexually compatible plants in the vicinity. Another design protocol
might meet the same performance standard by planting the GE plant at a
time in the growing season when surrounding plants of the same species
would not be biologically capable of being fertilized by pollen from
the GE plant (temporal isolation).
The regulations in current Sec. 340.3(e) specify that the APHIS
notification procedure must be completed within 30 days for
environmental release and importations and within 10 days for the
interstate movement of a regulated article. If APHIS completes the
review process and finds that all regulatory requirements have been
met, the notification is authorized in a process termed
``acknowledgement,'' and the applicant can proceed with the
introduction under the terms of the notification. Notifications are
valid for one year from the date of introduction.
Approximately 10% of APHIS authorizations are done under the
permitting procedure. The permitting procedure, found in Sec. 340.4 of
the current regulation, describes the types of permits, information
required for permit application, the standard permit conditions, and
administrative information (e.g., time frames, appeal procedure, etc.).
Permits include specific conditions that must be followed by the permit
holder. Standard permit conditions are listed in the regulation, and
APHIS can supplement these with additional conditions as necessary. The
current regulations specify the amount of time that APHIS is allotted
for review of complete permit applications: 60 days for permits for
importation and interstate movement; 120 days for environmental
release.
[[Page 60011]]
Some regulated articles are conditionally exempt from the
requirement for permits when moved interstate under the conditions
stipulated in the regulation. Conditional exemptions currently exist in
the regulations for the interstate movement of certain GE bacteria
(Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis), fungi (Saccharomyces
cerevisiae), as well as the plant species Arabidopsis thaliana. APHIS
established these conditional exemptions from interstate movement
permit by amending the regulations in 1988 and 1990.
APHIS forwards the applications for all permits, and notifications,
with any confidential business information redacted, to State
regulators in the States to which regulated articles will be moved and/
or in which environmental release is planned. This is done to notify
States of the requested action and to allow States to review and
comment on proposed releases or importations or movements.
The current regulations also include various provisions and
prescribed standards for containers, marking, and identity that apply
to shipments of regulated articles. For example, there are instructions
regarding how to label containers of imported regulated articles with
the nature of the contents, origin and destination, and other
information, and detailed instructions on what materials (plastic,
metal, etc.) and dimensions may be used for containers of regulated
articles.
Under the current regulations, APHIS may also grant ``nonregulated
status'' to a GE organism in accordance with the procedure described in
Sec. 340.6. A determination of nonregulated status means that the
organism is no longer subject to the part 340 regulations, and
therefore there is no longer any requirement for APHIS authorization
under part 340 for a permit or notification when the GE organism is
imported, moved interstate, or released into the environment.
C. Plant Protection Act Authority to Regulate Plant Pests, Noxious
Weeds, and Biological Control Organisms
Under the provisions of the PPA, Congress has granted the Secretary
of Agriculture authority to develop regulations in order to detect,
control, eradicate, suppress, prevent, or retard the spread of plant
pests or noxious weeds. The PPA grants the Secretary authority to
regulate the movement into and through the United States of any plant,
plant pest, plant product, biological control organism, noxious weed,
article, or means of conveyance, in order to prevent the introduction
or dissemination of plant pests and noxious weeds.
The current regulations were promulgated under former statutes,
i.e., the FPPA and PQA, which provide USDA authority to regulate
articles that present a risk of plant pest introduction or
dissemination. In addition to the provisions of the FPPA and PQA, the
PPA incorporates authority that previously was under the Noxious Weed
Act of 1974. In order to best evaluate the risks associated with these
GE organisms and regulate them when necessary, APHIS needs to exercise
its authorities regarding noxious weeds and biological control
organisms, in addition to its authority regarding plant pests.
The definition of plant pest in the PPA is broad and includes
living organisms that could directly or indirectly injure, damage, or
cause disease in any plant or plant product (7 U.S.C. Sec. 7702(14)).
Under the PPA, organisms which could be plant pests include:
Protozoans
Non-human animals
Parasitic plants
Bacteria
Fungi
Viruses or viroids
Infectious agents or other pathogens
Any article similar to or allied with any of the above
articles.
The definition of noxious weed in the PPA includes:
* * * any plant or plant product that can directly or indirectly
injure or cause damage to crops (including nursery stock or plant
products), livestock, poultry, or other interests of agriculture,
irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the United States,
the public health, or the environment. (PPA Sec. 7702(10))
An important distinction between noxious weeds and plant pests is
that noxious weeds under the PPA are always plants or plant products.
Plant pests are usually not plants (with the exception of certain
parasitic plants such as dodder, striga, and witchweed), but are other
types of organisms that harm plants.
III. Proposed Rule
A. Proposed Regulatory Scope (Sec. 340.0 Scope and general
restrictions)
We propose to better align the regulations with the PPA authorities
in order to ensure that the environmental release, importation, or
interstate movement of GE organisms does not pose a risk of introducing
or disseminating plant pests or noxious weeds. Although the current
program has been effective in ensuring the safe environmental release,
interstate movement, and importation of genetically engineered
organisms, technological advances have led to the possibility of
developing GE organisms that do not fit within the plant pest
definition, but may cause environmental or other types of physical harm
or damage covered by the definition of noxious weed in the PPA.
Therefore, we consider that it is appropriate to align the regulations
with both the plant pest and noxious weed authorities of the PPA.
1. Genetically Engineered Organisms Subject to 7 CFR part 340
We are proposing to revise the scope of the regulations in Sec.
340.0 to make it clear that decisions regarding which organisms are
regulated remain science-based and take both plant pest and noxious
weed risks into account. The proposed scope of the regulations states
that genetically engineered organisms whose importation, interstate
movement, or release into the environment would be subject to the
regulations are:
Genetically engineered plants if:
(i) The unmodified parent plant from which the GE plant was derived
is a plant pest or noxious weed, or
(ii) The trait introduced by genetic engineering could increase the
potential for the GE plant to be a plant pest or noxious weed, or
(iii) The risk that the GE plant poses as a plant pest or noxious
weed is unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines that the GE plant poses a plant
pest or noxious weed risk.
Genetically engineered non-plant, non-vertebrate organisms if:
(i) The recipient organism can directly or indirectly injure, cause
damage to, or cause disease in plants or plant products; or
(ii) The GE organism has been engineered in such a way that it may
increase the potential for it to be a plant pest: or
(iii) The risk that the GE organism poses as a plant pest is
unknown, or
(iv) The Administrator determines that the GE organism poses a
plant pest risk.
Under the current regulations, there is no explicit statement of
the relative responsibilities of the Administrator and regulated
parties in determining whether an organism met the definition for
regulated article and therefore would be subject to the regulations.
Under the proposed regulations, the responsible person for a GE
organism could correctly apply the criteria in Sec. 340.0 to determine
whether the GE organism is subject to the regulations. Alternatively,
[[Page 60012]]
the Administrator could determine any GE organism to be regulated after
determining that the GE plant poses a plant pest or noxious weed risk.
In many cases, it will be very straightforward for a responsible
person to apply these criteria and determine that a GE organism is
subject to the regulations. For example, the GE organism would clearly
be subject to the regulations if the recipient organism were a plant
pest or noxious weed. A GE organism would also clearly be subject to
the regulations if there was little data or previous experience
available concerning the recipient organism's plant pest or noxious
weed potential, or the type of modification, with the result that it is
difficult to do a reliable evaluation of the risks that the GE organism
may be a plant pest or noxious weed.
In other cases, it may not be readily apparent to the responsible
person for a GE organism whether or not the organism falls within the
scope of Sec. 340.0 and is regulated. For this reason, persons who are
not sure about whether a GE organism falls within the regulations or
who maintain that a particular GE organism is not subject to the
regulations based on their belief that it is not an organism within the
scope of Sec. 340.0 may consult with APHIS.
A GE organism may be within the scope of the regulations based on
the information available at the time of the determination, which is
usually less information than is available when the Administrator
evaluates, for example, whether a regulated GE organism should be
considered for an exemption from the requirement for a permit, or
should be considered for a determination of nonregulated status (see
discussion of Sec. 340.6 below regarding nonregulated status). In
other words, this scope determination has one purpose (to determine
whether regulation is necessary at all) and is based on one level of
knowledge about a GE organism, while determinations regarding such
things as necessary permit conditions or exemptions or nonregulated
status have a different purpose and are based on a different level of
knowledge about a GE organism.
It is important to note that while a GE organism may be within the
scope of the regulations due to certain identified plant pest or
noxious weed risks, it may also be within the scope of the regulations
if there is not enough information about the GE organism's potential
plant pest or noxious weed risks to make a decision regarding those
risks. At the early stages of developing a GE organism, there may not
be sufficient information available about the organism to clearly
determine the potential associated plant pest or noxious weed risks.
Unknown risks might lead to a determination by the Administrator that a
GE organism should be subjected to regulatory oversight if APHIS lacks
familiarity with the non-transformed recipient organism or the
introduced trait.
The proposed scope makes it clear that the mere act of genetic
engineering does not trigger regulatory oversight or mean that a GE
organism will pose risks as a plant pest or noxious weed. Instead, it
clarifies that APHIS would subject a GE organism to regulatory
oversight based upon known plant pest and noxious weed risks of the
parent organisms, or based upon the traits of the GE organism, or based
upon the possibility of unknown risks as a plant pest or noxious weed
when insufficient information is available.
Consultation With APHIS Regarding the Scope of These Regulations
The criteria described in the scope should help developers form a
reasonable expectation as to whether their GE organism is within the
scope of the regulations, based on the nature of the parent organisms,
the engineered traits, and the amount of information available
regarding the organism and similar organisms.
APHIS anticipates that initially the range of GE organisms that the
Administrator may determine to be covered by the proposed regulatory
scope will be broad. This will be due to both an initial measured
implementation of the revised regulatory oversight as well as to the
application of the scope criteria to the transformed organisms and
recipient traits. Over time, the range of GE organisms subject to
oversight is expected to decrease as APHIS becomes more familiar with
these organisms and receives information from which it can reach a
conclusion that these GE organisms or groups of organisms do not
present increased or unfamiliar plant pest or noxious weed risks.
Because the Administrator may make such a determination at any time the
Administrator receives information that a GE organism is within the
scope, APHIS expects that developers will seek early consultation with
APHIS on whether the regulatory scope covers their GE organism. Since
it is generally necessary for research or business plans to include, as
early as possible, elements addressing regulatory processing, approval,
and compliance, it will be in the interest of the developers to
determine the regulatory status of their GE organism prior to
contemplating its movement or environmental release. Therefore, APHIS
will offer to consult with a developer of a GE organism regarding
whether the GE organism is within the scope of the proposed
regulations.
After consultation and review of available information, the
Administrator will respond in writing as to whether the Administrator
has determined that the GE organism is within the scope of the
regulations. APHIS plans to make information publicly available by
posting and maintaining information on its Web site about the
determinations it makes pursuant to this consultation process to help
the public and regulated entities understand which organisms are
subject to the regulations.
We welcome suggestions from the public on the most appropriate ways
to provide administrative guidance to the public on the issue of which
GE organisms are within the scope of the regulations. The Agency is
especially interested in ways which will balance transparency with the
efficient use of Agency resources in conducting consultations and
communicating information to the public regarding which GE organisms
are within the scope of the regulations.
Organisms Specifically Excluded From the Scope of the Regulations
Specifically excluded from the proposed regulatory scope are GE
microorganisms that are regulated as biological control organisms by
the EPA under provisions of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). APHIS concludes that there is no need for such
GE organisms to be evaluated by both agencies. EPA is already
evaluating the environmental safety of such organisms with respect to
their impact on the entire environment, including plants. We also
propose to retain an exclusion from the current regulations for GE
microorganisms where the recipient microorganism is not a plant pest
and which have resulted from the addition of genetic material from a
donor organism where the material is well characterized and contains
only non-coding regulatory regions.
Effect of Noxious Weed Authority on the Scope of the Proposed
Regulations
The definition of noxious weed encompasses plants that pose risks
akin to plant pests, because it includes ``any plant or plant product''
that can ``injure or cause damage to crops * * * other interests of
agriculture * * * or the environment'', but also includes plants that
can pose harm to non-plant organisms, such as humans. Therefore
[[Page 60013]]
evaluation of noxious weed risk expands what we can consider, while
still including those risks examined under the plant pest approach.
When considering risks associated with a GE plant, we would continue to
consider whether it can harm plants, as well as whether it can cause
the other types of physical harm or damage described in the definition
for noxious weed.
The first consideration in determining if a plant is a noxious weed
is identifying what direct injury or damage (physical harm) the plant
causes. If direct harm or damage is established, the next consideration
is to evaluate any indirect damage the plant may cause to interests of
agriculture, irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the environment. In general,
federally listed noxious weeds are plants that are likely to be
aggressively invasive, have significant negative impacts, and are
extremely difficult to manage or control once established.
The distinction between a weed and a noxious weed warrants
emphasis. ``Weeds,'' in the broadest sense of the word, could include
any plant growing where and/or when it is unwanted; even plants that
are desirable in some settings may be considered weeds in others. In a
narrower sense, weeds are invasive, often non-native, plants which
impact natural and managed ecosystems, often with significant negative
consequences due to lost yields, changes in management practices,
altered herbicide use, etc. Only a fraction of these problematic weeds
are considered to be so invasive, so harmful, and so difficult to
control that Federal regulatory intervention to prevent their
introduction or dissemination is justified, and these are the focus of
the regulatory controls placed on them by APHIS. However, any weed, and
virtually any plant or plant product, can be evaluated by APHIS to
determine whether its characteristics and potential impacts warrant its
listing as a noxious weed.
APHIS currently lists 98 aquatic, terrestrial, or parasitic plant
taxa as noxious weeds. The species included in the list illustrate the
kinds of plants APHIS considers to be sufficiently invasive, damaging,
and difficult to control to be deemed noxious weeds. Table 1 describes
some specific examples from the Federal noxious weed list and the kinds
of impacts noxious weeds can have, to illustrate the types of effects
APHIS will be looking for when evaluating whether GE plants reviewed
under part 340 have any potential noxious weed traits. The experience
and precedents developed by the APHIS-PPQ noxious weed program provide
a guide for the regulation of plants that may be noxious weeds, and we
intend to apply it to the consideration of GE plants in the same way.
Table 1--Examples of Impacts Caused by Federally Listed Noxious Weeds
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description of
Impact impact Example species
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lost productivity of crop Noxious weeds may Cogongrass (Imperata
fields. directly compete cylindrica) infests
with crop plants over 20 crop
for limited species; it releases
resources, chemicals into the
dramatically soil that suppress
reducing yields. crop growth and
causes damaging
puncture wounds to
plant roots, bulbs,
and tubers. Other
examples include
Benghal dayflower
(Commelina
benghalensis), red
rice (Oryza spp.),
and kikuyugrass
(Pennisetum
clandestinum).
Parasitic damage to crops..... Parasitic plants Federally listed
can cause noxious parasitic
significant plants include the
reductions in dodders (Cuscuta
yield by spp.)--with common
attaching names like
themselves to a strangleweed,
host plant, devil's-guts,
removing hellbine, and
nutrients and witch's hair--and
ultimately witchweed (Striga
killing it. spp.), which causes
devastating losses
in corn, sorghum,
and rice.
Reduced productivity of Grazing animals Serrated tussock
pasture. may avoid (Nassella
noxious weeds trichotoma) has
and consume the heavily infested
more favorable large areas, leaving
pasture species, them completely
resulting in incapable of
increased supporting
noxious weed livestock.
populations at
the expense of
more favorable
species. Noxious
weeds may also
outcompete
desirable
pasture species.
Injury to humans or livestock. Many noxious Cape tulip (Homeria
weeds are toxic, spp.) contains a
harming humans cardiac glycoside,
or livestock which can be fatal
either when to livestock.
consumed or by Contact with giant
direct contact. hogweed (Heracleum
mantegazzianum)
causes painful skin
blisters. Three-
cornered jack (Emex
australis) and
devil's thorn (Emex
spinosa) both bear
spiny fruits that
can cripple or cause
injury to livestock
or other animals.
Unchecked overgrowth.......... Noxious weeds may Mile-a-minute vines
be capable of (Mikania cordata and
completely M. micrantha) can
dominating the entirely smother
landscape and fields and forests
preventing the in a dense, tangled
use of mass of vines. A
cultivated or single plant of the
pasture lands aquatic weed giant
for agriculture. salvinia (Salvinia
spp.) can blanket 40
square miles in 3
months, and produce
an underwater mat 3
feet thick.
Physical obstructions......... Growth rate and Certain mesquites
habit of some (Prosopis spp.),
noxious weeds jointed prickly pear
may physically (Opuntia
hamper the aurantiaca), and
movement of African boxthorn
livestock and (Lycium
humans, or ferocissimum) form
interfere with impenetrable
navigation of thickets filled with
waterways. thorns or needles,
blocking the
movement of grazing
animals, injuring
them or preventing
access to food and
water.
Disruption of water flow...... Aquatic noxious Notable examples
weeds may include hydrilla
disrupt water (Hydrilla
flow, adversely verticillata), giant
affecting salvinia (Salvinia
irrigation, spp.), and Chinese
drainage and waterspinach
flood control (Ipomoea aquatica).
canals, city Dense mats of oxygen
water intakes, weed (Lagarosiphon
and recreational major) can
water use. completely shut down
operation of
hydroelectric
plants.
[[Page 60014]]
Habitat alteration............ Noxious weeds may Infestation of lakes
severely alter and ponds with
water quality by hydrilla (Hydrilla
changing oxygen verticillata) can
and nutrient alter aquatic
content, may ecosystems so
dramatically drastically that
lower local native plants are
water tables, or entirely eliminated,
could so rendering the
significantly habitat unsuitable
outcompete or for fish and other
overgrow other wildlife.
vegetation
resulting in a
complete
ecological shift
of the habitat.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, APHIS' determination that a plant is a noxious
weed is based on notable physical harm or injury caused by the plant.
The elements of the noxious weed definition include a number of
interests that might be damaged by noxious weeds including not only
plants but irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the United
States, the public health, the environment and interests of
agriculture. Often APHIS quantifies the physical harm or injury in
terms of economic losses. Loss in commodity value due to the presence
of noxious weeds in seeds, for example, is a consequence of the
anticipated physical damage that would be caused if the seed containing
a noxious weed were distributed and planted; the economic loss is never
simply the result of market preference to have commodities free of
certain noxious weed seeds in and of itself, in the absence of any
potential physical damage or harm. APHIS does not consider significant
economic effects alone that are not linked to physical damage to be
sufficient to determine a plant is a noxious weed.
Certainly, some noxious weeds can cause physical harm to the health
of humans or livestock and other animals. In general, these impacts
occur when individuals come into direct contact with the noxious plants
or plant parts, which may cause physical injury or are toxic or
otherwise harmful when consumed. Conceivably, noxious weeds growing in
crop fields could potentially threaten public health, for example, if
toxic parts of the noxious weeds are harvested and inadvertently enter
the food supply. If such toxic or otherwise harmful noxious weed parts
were found in food and caused the food to be ``adulterated'' within the
meaning of the FFDCA, FDA could take regulatory action against the
food.
Whereas APHIS has no direct role in evaluating the safety of foods,
the agency plays an important supporting role in safeguarding the food
supply by protecting the health of plants and animals at the farm
level. When evaluating whether a particular GE plant may be a noxious
weed because it poses a public health risk when growing in the
environment, APHIS considers toxicity and other food safety
information, including the type reviewed by EPA and FDA. In the case of
GE plants, APHIS would not assess the safety of the GE plant for human
or animal consumption, but would consider available information about
toxicity and other food safety information in assessing noxious weed
risk posed by the plants growing in the environment.
It should be noted, moreover, that most GE plants that APHIS has
been regulating in the past, such as varieties of GE corn and soybeans
modified with common agronomic traits, do not qualify as ``noxious
weeds''. But with the increasing diversity of both agronomic and non-
agronomic traits being engineered into plants it is appropriate to
place regulatory controls upon GE plants proportionate to the
likelihood that they may present a noxious weed risk until the
potential risk can be appropriately evaluated.
How Non-Plant, Non-Vertebrate GE Organisms Fall Within the Scope of the
Regulations
The proposed revision of the regulations retains control for
potential plant pest risks posed by non-plant, non-vertebrate GE
organisms. We would continue to explicitly use the plant pest
provisions of the PPA for regulating non-plant, non-vertebrate GE
organisms which align with the taxa listed in the PPA definition of
plant pest. In its reviews of GE non-plant and non-vertebrate species,
APHIS will continue to assess GE insects, fungi, bacteria, and other
non-plant, non-vertebrate organisms for their potential to pose risks
as plant pests.
The scope of the regulations as defined above makes it clear that
it is the Administrator, and not the public, who determines whether a
non-plant organism is within or outside the proposed scope of the Part
340 regulations. APHIS welcomes public comment on the proposed concise
criteria that the Administrator would consider when concluding that a
GE organism is not a plant pest. We envision providing additional
information on the Administrator's interpretation on such criteria at
the time of the final rule or in subsequent administrative guidance.
GE Vertebrate Animals Do Not Fall Within the Scope of the Regulations
Although the PPA definition of plant pest includes the potential
for a nonhuman, vertebrate animal to be considered a plant pest, APHIS
decided at this time that there are no demonstrated risks or pending GE
animal developments indicating that it is necessary for the proposed
regulations to evaluate vertebrate GE animals as potential plant pests.
Because other statutory authorities exist for addressing GE animals,
APHIS could guard against any plant pest risks that might be presented
by GE vertebrate animals without directly regulating them under the
regulations in part 340. On the other hand, we propose to regulate GE
invertebrate animals under part 340 because many classes of
invertebrates include known plant pests (e.g., insects, arachnids,
nematodes, gastropods, etc.).
How GE Biological Control Organisms (BCOs) Fall Within the Scope of the
Regulations
The PPA defines biological control organism (BCO) as ``any enemy,
antagonist, or competitor used to control a plant pest or noxious
weed'' (7 U.S.C. 7702(2)). The PPA gives the authority to regulate
plant pests and noxious weeds, not specifically biocontrol organisms.
APHIS recognizes that BCOs may have the potential to affect populations
of noxious weeds or plant pests, or become plant pests themselves. To
fall within the scope of the proposed regulations, the GE BCO would
have to pose a threat as a plant pest or noxious weed. There are
relatively few examples today of GE BCOs, but these may become more
common in the future. For example, some researchers are developing GE
biological control pink bollworms that
[[Page 60015]]
are sterile, which achieve their controlling effect by reducing the
ability of fertile, non-GE pink bollworms to produce offspring. Such GE
pink bollworm BCOs would fall within the scope of the proposed
regulation, because they are plant pests. Although there are currently
no examples of using GE plants as BCOs, such a GE plant would be
evaluated under the proposed regulations to evaluate whether it is a
noxious weed or a plant pest.
Currently, the federal regulation of microbial BCOs is regulated by
EPA under FIFRA, and this covers GE as well as non-GE microorganisms
used to mitigate the effect of pests. Unlike the PPA, which limits the
definition of BCO only to organisms used to control plant pests and
noxious weeds, FIFRA covers microorganisms used as biological control
for any pest. APHIS considers it duplicative to have these regulations
include GE microbial BCOs under its scope since FIFRA already
adequately covers them, so APHIS is proposing that the regulatory scope
language in Sec. 340.0(d) would explicitly exclude GE microorganisms
if they are already being regulated as BCOs by EPA under FIFRA. We are
proposing to only regulate GE BCO macro-organisms that fall under the
proposed regulatory scope (APHIS-PPQ currently regulates the macro-
organism non-GE BCOs used to control plant pests and noxious weeds
pursuant to other regulations). APHIS welcomes public comment on this
aspect of its proposal.
Intrastate Movements of GE Organisms Between Contained Facilities and
Activities in Contained Facilities Do Not Fall Within the Scope of the
Regulations
Under the current regulations, certain GE organisms are only
regulated by APHIS if they are imported, moved interstate, or released
into the environment. The regulations do not govern intrastate
movements between contained facilities such as laboratories, nor do
they govern such activities as creating GE organism in a contained
research laboratory. The proposed revision does not change this aspect
of the regulations.
2. Deleting the List of Organisms Which Are or Contain Plant Pests
In Sec. 340.2 of the current regulations, there is a list of taxa
that are considered to be plant pests. Under the proposed scope, this
list is not needed because we would not use taxonomic classification of
donor and recipient organisms to determine if a GE organism is
regulated. When in the course of evaluating a GE organism APHIS
considers whether a donor or recipient species is likely to be a plant
pest or noxious weed, we would consider the most up-to-date pest
information maintained by PPQ. This information is more specific than
the information in the list of plant pest taxa in the current
regulations, and should be more useful and reliable than static lists
of taxa. APHIS welcomes public comment on deletion of the taxa list and
preferred sources of plant pest and noxious weed information for use
under the proposed regulations.
With deletion of this list from the regulations, there is also no
longer a need for the procedure currently described in Sec. 340.5 for
amending this list.
3. Regulating Whole Organisms, Parts, and Nonliving Products
APHIS proposes to clarify the regulated status of nonliving plant
products in the regulations. First, the PPA defines a plant pest only
as any living stage of any of the articles specifically named in the
plant pest definition that can directly or indirectly injure, cause
damage to, or cause disease in any plant or plant product. Moreover,
APHIS does not consider most GE organisms or parts of GE organisms
which cannot reproduce to present a risk as plant pests or noxious
weeds.
Conversely, we would regulate importation, interstate movement and
release into the environment of GE seedlings, seeds, tubers, cuttings,
bulbs, spores, etc., because there is a reasonable, albeit small,
possibility of reproduction, establishment, and spread if these were
deliberately or accidentally released into the environment without
authorization.
Viable pollen from GE plants imported, moved interstate, or
released into the environment would be subject to the regulations
because such movements of pollen can reasonably lead to genomes
becoming established in the environment. Similarly, in circumstances
where an article incidentally contains viable pollen, during movement,
APHIS would consider the movement regulated. There are many cases,
however, when pollen may be present but is no longer capable of
producing offspring, e.g., nonviable or immature pollen. In such cases,
APHIS would not require permits under this part. The commercial
distribution of cut flowers is one pollen movement situation that APHIS
has considered in light of the regulations, especially in cases where
the flowers are grown in other countries then imported only as cut
flowers. APHIS considers these circumstances to pose little, if any
risk, and therefore would not require permits for these activities.
The PPA defines a noxious weed as encompassing both plants and
plant products. A plant product is defined as ``any flower, fruit,
vegetable, root, bulb, seed, or other plant part that is not included
in the definition of plant; or any manufactured or processed plant or
plant part.'' APHIS has regulated GE organisms under part 340 for over
20 years, and there is no strong evidence to suggest the need to
regulate nonliving (nonviable) plant products in most cases. However,
if in a specific case the importation, interstate movement, or
environmental release of nonliving products of a GE plant may pose
noxious weed risks, APHIS has clear authority to address those risks by
imposing permit conditions on the handling of such nonliving products
of the GE organism in the permit issued for the associated living GE
organism. The proposed regulations state clearly in Sec. 340.3(b) that
the Administrator may also assign permit conditions addressing
nonliving plant materials associated with or derived from GE organisms
when such conditions are needed to make it unlikely that the nonliving
materials would pose a noxious weed risk. APHIS invites consultation
from any person considering a movement or release of nonliving
materials derived from a GE organism who is uncertain as to whether it
would be regulated.
B. Permits for Authorizing Importation, Interstate Movement and Release
Into the Environment of Certain GE Organisms
1. Elimination of the Notification Procedure
APHIS first added the notification procedure to the regulations in
1993 as an administratively streamlined procedure for certain GE plants
that met the eligibility criteria described in the regulation. Rather
than using customized requirements, like the permit conditions used for
the permitting procedure, the notification procedure uses generalized
performance standards that are described in the regulation itself. The
use of the performance standards that do not vary from one notification
to the next is one of the ways that the more rapid administrative
turnaround was achieved. In some ways, the term ``notification'' has
been misleading to the public, since they do not realize that sending a
notification does not mean automatic authorization by APHIS.
APHIS reviews notifications to verify that the GE plant meets the
eligibility criteria, and also evaluates whether the
[[Page 60016]]
proposed importation, interstate movement or environmental release can
be done in a manner that meets the performance standards described in
the regulation. In many ways, these APHIS evaluations for notifications
are very similar to those done for permit applications, but the
notification procedure relies on applicants agreeing to meet the
performance standards described in the regulation rather than
submitting an application for APHIS review describing the specific
measures they will employ for the activity (as is the case for
permits). With permits, but not with notifications, APHIS can accept
the proposed measures or add to them and the result is a set of binding
customized permit conditions.
Because the notification procedure uses only the performance
standards in the regulations, it is more administratively streamlined,
but the general nature of the standards has made it difficult for APHIS
inspectors to determine if a notification holder is in compliance and
can also make enforcement more difficult. For example, under the
current regulations, one of the performance standards for notifications
relevant to environmental releases states that: ``The field trial must
be conducted such that (1) the regulated