Monsanto Company and KWS SAAT AG; Determination of Nonregulated Status of Sugar Beet Genetically Engineered for Tolerance to the Herbicide Glyphosate, 42693-42694 [2012-17819]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 140 / Friday, July 20, 2012 / Notices
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
[Docket No. APHIS–2010–0047]
Monsanto Company and KWS SAAT
AG; Determination of Nonregulated
Status of Sugar Beet Genetically
Engineered for Tolerance to the
Herbicide Glyphosate
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
We are advising the public of
our determination that sugar beet
genetically engineered for tolerance to
the herbicide glyphosate, designated as
H7-1, is no longer considered a
regulated article under our regulations
governing the introduction of certain
genetically engineered organisms. Our
determination is based on our
evaluation of data submitted by the
Monsanto Company and KWS SAAT
AG in its petition for a determination of
nonregulated status, our analysis of
publically available scientific data, and
comments received from the public on
the petition for nonregulated status and
its associated environmental impact
statement and plant pest risk
assessment. This notice also announces
the availability of our written
determination and record of decision.
DATES: Effective Date: July 20, 2012.
ADDRESSES: You may read the
documents referenced in this notice and
any comments we received 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) 799–7039 before
coming. Those documents are also
available on the Internet at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/biotechnology/
not_reg.html and are posted with the
comments we received on the
Regulations.gov Web site at https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2010-0047.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Rebecca L. Stankiewicz Gabel, Senior
Environmental Protection Specialist,
Environmental Risk Analysis Programs,
BRS, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147,
Riverdale, MD 20737–1238; (301) 851–
3927. To obtain copies of the documents
referenced in this notice, contact Ms.
Cindy Eck at (301) 851–3892, email:
cynthia.a.eck@aphis.usda.gov.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:18 Jul 19, 2012
Jkt 226001
The
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,’’ regulate,
among other things, the introduction
(importation, interstate movement, or
release into the environment) of
organisms and products altered or
produced through genetic engineering
that are plant pests or that there is
reason to believe are plant pests. Such
genetically engineered (GE) organisms
and products are considered ‘‘regulated
articles.’’
The regulations in § 340.6(a) provide
that any person may submit a petition
to APHIS seeking a determination that
an article should not be regulated under
7 CFR part 340. Paragraphs (b) and (c)
of § 340.6 describe the form that a
petition for a determination of
nonregulated status must take and the
information that must be included in
the petition.
On October 19, 2004, APHIS
published a notice in the Federal
Register (69 FR 61466–61467, Docket
No. 04–075–1) announcing receipt of a
petition from the Monsanto Company
(Monsanto) and KWS SAAT AG (KWS)
requesting a determination of
nonregulated status under 7 CFR part
340 of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris ssp.
vulgaris) designated as event H7-1,
which has been genetically engineered
for tolerance to the herbicide
glyphosate. The petition stated that this
article should not be regulated by
APHIS because it does not present a
plant pest risk. APHIS also announced
in that notice the availability of a draft
environmental assessment (EA) for the
proposed determination of nonregulated
status.
Following review of public comments
and completion of the EA, we published
another notice in the Federal Register
on March 17, 2005 (70 FR 13007–13008,
Docket No. 04–075–2), advising the
public of our determination, effective
March 4, 2005, that the Monsanto/KWS
sugar beet event H7-1 was no longer
considered a regulated article under
APHIS regulations in 7 CFR part 340.
On September 21, 2009, the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District
of California issued a ruling in a lawsuit
challenging APHIS’ determination of
nonregulated status of sugar beet event
H7-1, finding that APHIS should have
completed an environmental impact
statement (EIS) prior to making a
determination of nonregulated status of
sugar beet event H7-1. On May 28, 2010
(75 FR 29969–29972, Docket No.
APHIS–2010–0047), we subsequently
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
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42693
published a notice of intent to prepare
an EIS and proposed scope of study.
National Environmental Policy Act and
Record of Decision
To provide the public with
documentation of APHIS’ review and
analysis of the potential environmental
impacts of sugar beet event H7-1 and
interrelated socioeconomic impacts
associated with a determination of
nonregulated status of sugar beet event
H7-1, an EIS has been prepared in
accordance with: (1) The National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.); (2) regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality for
implementing the procedural provisions
of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500–1508); (3)
USDA regulations implementing NEPA
(7 CFR part 1b); and (4) APHIS’ NEPA
Implementing Procedures (7 CFR part
372).
A notice of availability regarding the
draft EIS was published by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
in the Federal Register on October 14,
2011 (76 FR 63922, Docket No. ER–
FRL–8999–5), and a notice of
availability regarding the final EIS was
published by EPA in the Federal
Register on June 8, 2012 (77 FR 34041–
34042, Docket No. ER–FRL–9003–4).
The NEPA implementing regulations in
40 CFR 1506.10 require a minimum 30day waiting period between the time the
notice of availability of a final EIS is
published and the time an agency makes
a decision on an action covered by the
EIS. APHIS has reviewed the final EIS
and evaluated the comments received
during the 30-day waiting period and
has concluded that it has fully and
appropriately analyzed the issues
covered by the final EIS and those
comments. Based on our final EIS, the
response to public comments, and other
pertinent scientific data, APHIS has
prepared a record of decision for the
final EIS.
Determination of Nonregulated Status
Based on APHIS’ analysis of field and
laboratory data submitted by Monsanto/
KWS, references provided in the
petition, peer-reviewed publications,
information analyzed in the EIS, the
plant pest risk assessment, comments
provided by the public, and APHIS’
evaluation of and response to those
comments, APHIS has determined that
sugar beet event H7-1 is unlikely to pose
a plant pest risk and, in fact, is not a
plant pest. Accordingly, the petition
requesting a determination of
nonregulated status is approved, and
sugar beet event H7-1 is no longer
subject to our regulations governing the
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42694
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 140 / Friday, July 20, 2012 / Notices
introduction of certain genetically
engineered organisms and to the plant
pest provisions of the Plant Protection
Act.
Copies of the determination of
nonregulated status document and the
record of decision, as well as copies of
the final plant pest risk assessment and
final EIS upon which the determination
and record of decision were based, are
available as indicated in the ADDRESSES
and FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
sections of this notice.
Done in Washington, DC, this 18th day of
July 2012.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Helena National Forest, Montana,
Telegraph Vegetation Project
Purpose and Need for Action
Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Corrected NOI.
AGENCY:
On November 12, 2009, a
Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare an
environmental impact statement called
the Telegraph Vegetation Project was
published in the 74 FR 58239. This NOI
is hereby corrected due to a change in
the proposed action (FSH 1909.15
Chapter 20, 22.2).
New to the proposed action is the
addition of approximately 449 acres of
slashing generally small diameter trees
followed by prescribed burning within
the Jericho Mountain Inventoried
Roadless Area.
The Helena National Forest will still
prepare an environmental impact
statement for the Telegraph Vegetation
Project to manage vegetation actions in
the Little Blackfoot drainage west of the
Continental Divide. The purpose and
need for action remains the same as in
the original NOI, which is to be
responsive to the mountain pine beetle
outbreak in this area by recovering
economic value of dead and dying trees,
promoting desirable regeneration,
reducing fuels and the risk of wildfire,
and maintaining diverse wildlife
habitats.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis must be received by
August 20, 2012. The draft
environmental impact statement is
expected Feb 2013 and the final
environmental impact statement is
expected July 2013.
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18:18 Jul 19, 2012
Jkt 226001
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott Johnson at 406–495–3795.
Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Time, Monday through Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[FR Doc. 2012–17819 Filed 7–19–12; 8:45 am]
DATES:
Send written comments to
Scott Johnson, Helena National Forest,
2880 Skyway Dr., Helena, MT 59602.
Comments may also be sent via email to
comments-northern-helena@fs.fed.us, or
via facsimile to 406–449–5436. Please
indicate ‘‘Telegraph Scoping’’ on the
subject line.
It is important that reviewers provide
their comments at such times and in
such a way that they are useful to the
Agency’s preparation of the EIS.
Therefore, comments should be
provided prior to the close of the
comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewer’s concerns and
contentions.
ADDRESSES:
Wide-scale tree mortality has
occurred throughout the project area
due to the mountain pine beetle.
Treatment is needed to ensure diverse
and sustainable forest stands and to
lessen the risks of wildfire which could
threaten wildland urban interface areas.
The project focuses on reducing
hazardous fuels, establishing healthy
regeneration, and recovering the
economic value of dead trees. In
addition, aspen and whitebark pine can
be promoted with treatment. The project
also seeks to maintain or improve
watershed values.
Proposed Action
Approximately 6,666 acres are
proposed for treatment. Roughly 1,750
acres are young stands that established
after past harvest and are in need of
thinning to ensure they reach viable
maturity. The remaining acres are
primarily mature stands of lodgepole
pine with some Douglas-fir, Engelmann
spruce, and subalpine fir with high
mountain pine beetle mortality. These
acres would be treated using a
combination of improvement cuts,
regeneration harvests, thinning, and
prescribed fire. Post treatment activities
would include approximately 4,064
acres of underburning, site prep,
broadcast burning, jackpot burning, and
hand piling/burning. Approximately
449 acres of slashing generally small
diameter trees followed by prescribed
burning would occur within the Jericho
Mountain Inventoried Roadless Area.
Up to 8 miles of temporary road
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Frm 00003
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
construction and approximately 78
miles of road reconstruction/
maintenance would be necessary to
implement the proposed action.
A site specific forest plan amendment
may be needed related to forest plan
standards for hiding cover, open road
densities during hunting season, and
thermal cover.
Responsible Official
Helena National Forest Supervisor.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The decisions to be made include:
Whether to implement the proposed
action or an alternative to the proposed
action, what monitoring requirements
would be appropriate to evaluate the
implementation of this project, and
whether a forest plan amendment would
be necessary as a result of the decision
for this project.
Scoping Process
This notice of intent initiates the
scoping process, which guides the
development of the environmental
impact statement. In July 2012, a
scoping package will be mailed, an open
house will be scheduled, and Web site
information will be posted. The
comments received from the initial
scoping period in November 2009 will
still be considered when analyzing
issues and developing alternatives. They
will be retained in the project record.
It is important that reviewers provide
their comments at such times and in
such manner that they are useful to the
agency’s preparation of the
environmental impact statement.
Therefore, comments should be
provided prior to the close of the
comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewer’s concerns and
contentions. The submission of timely
and specific comments can affect a
reviewer’s ability to participate in
subsequent administrative appeal or
judicial review.
Comments received in response to
this solicitation, including names,
addresses, email addresses, and phone
numbers of those who comment, will be
part of the public record and will be
available for inspection. Comments
submitted anonymously will be
accepted and considered; however,
anonymous comments will not provide
the Agency with the ability to provide
the respondent with subsequent
environmental documents.
Dated: July 13, 2012.
Kevin T. Riordan,
Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. 2012–17759 Filed 7–19–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 140 (Friday, July 20, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 42693-42694]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-17819]
[[Page 42693]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
[Docket No. APHIS-2010-0047]
Monsanto Company and KWS SAAT AG; Determination of Nonregulated
Status of Sugar Beet Genetically Engineered for Tolerance to the
Herbicide Glyphosate
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are advising the public of our determination that sugar
beet genetically engineered for tolerance to the herbicide glyphosate,
designated as H7-1, is no longer considered a regulated article under
our regulations governing the introduction of certain genetically
engineered organisms. Our determination is based on our evaluation of
data submitted by the Monsanto Company and KWS SAAT AG in its petition
for a determination of nonregulated status, our analysis of publically
available scientific data, and comments received from the public on the
petition for nonregulated status and its associated environmental
impact statement and plant pest risk assessment. This notice also
announces the availability of our written determination and record of
decision.
DATES: Effective Date: July 20, 2012.
ADDRESSES: You may read the documents referenced in this notice and any
comments we received 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) 799-7039 before coming. Those
documents are also available on the Internet at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/biotechnology/not_reg.html and are posted with the
comments we received on the Regulations.gov Web site at https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2010-0047.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Rebecca L. Stankiewicz Gabel,
Senior Environmental Protection Specialist, Environmental Risk Analysis
Programs, BRS, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 147, Riverdale, MD 20737-
1238; (301) 851-3927. To obtain copies of the documents referenced in
this notice, contact Ms. Cindy Eck at (301) 851-3892, email:
cynthia.a.eck@aphis.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The 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,'' regulate, among other things, the
introduction (importation, interstate movement, or release into the
environment) of organisms and products altered or produced through
genetic engineering that are plant pests or that there is reason to
believe are plant pests. Such genetically engineered (GE) organisms and
products are considered ``regulated articles.''
The regulations in Sec. 340.6(a) provide that any person may
submit a petition to APHIS seeking a determination that an article
should not be regulated under 7 CFR part 340. Paragraphs (b) and (c) of
Sec. 340.6 describe the form that a petition for a determination of
nonregulated status must take and the information that must be included
in the petition.
On October 19, 2004, APHIS published a notice in the Federal
Register (69 FR 61466-61467, Docket No. 04-075-1) announcing receipt of
a petition from the Monsanto Company (Monsanto) and KWS SAAT AG (KWS)
requesting a determination of nonregulated status under 7 CFR part 340
of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris ssp. vulgaris) designated as event H7-1,
which has been genetically engineered for tolerance to the herbicide
glyphosate. The petition stated that this article should not be
regulated by APHIS because it does not present a plant pest risk. APHIS
also announced in that notice the availability of a draft environmental
assessment (EA) for the proposed determination of nonregulated status.
Following review of public comments and completion of the EA, we
published another notice in the Federal Register on March 17, 2005 (70
FR 13007-13008, Docket No. 04-075-2), advising the public of our
determination, effective March 4, 2005, that the Monsanto/KWS sugar
beet event H7-1 was no longer considered a regulated article under
APHIS regulations in 7 CFR part 340.
On September 21, 2009, the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of California issued a ruling in a lawsuit challenging APHIS'
determination of nonregulated status of sugar beet event H7-1, finding
that APHIS should have completed an environmental impact statement
(EIS) prior to making a determination of nonregulated status of sugar
beet event H7-1. On May 28, 2010 (75 FR 29969-29972, Docket No. APHIS-
2010-0047), we subsequently published a notice of intent to prepare an
EIS and proposed scope of study.
National Environmental Policy Act and Record of Decision
To provide the public with documentation of APHIS' review and
analysis of the potential environmental impacts of sugar beet event H7-
1 and interrelated socioeconomic impacts associated with a
determination of nonregulated status of sugar beet event H7-1, an EIS
has been prepared in accordance with: (1) The National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.); (2)
regulations of the Council on Environmental Quality for implementing
the procedural provisions of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508); (3) USDA
regulations implementing NEPA (7 CFR part 1b); and (4) APHIS' NEPA
Implementing Procedures (7 CFR part 372).
A notice of availability regarding the draft EIS was published by
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the Federal Register on
October 14, 2011 (76 FR 63922, Docket No. ER-FRL-8999-5), and a notice
of availability regarding the final EIS was published by EPA in the
Federal Register on June 8, 2012 (77 FR 34041-34042, Docket No. ER-FRL-
9003-4). The NEPA implementing regulations in 40 CFR 1506.10 require a
minimum 30-day waiting period between the time the notice of
availability of a final EIS is published and the time an agency makes a
decision on an action covered by the EIS. APHIS has reviewed the final
EIS and evaluated the comments received during the 30-day waiting
period and has concluded that it has fully and appropriately analyzed
the issues covered by the final EIS and those comments. Based on our
final EIS, the response to public comments, and other pertinent
scientific data, APHIS has prepared a record of decision for the final
EIS.
Determination of Nonregulated Status
Based on APHIS' analysis of field and laboratory data submitted by
Monsanto/KWS, references provided in the petition, peer-reviewed
publications, information analyzed in the EIS, the plant pest risk
assessment, comments provided by the public, and APHIS' evaluation of
and response to those comments, APHIS has determined that sugar beet
event H7-1 is unlikely to pose a plant pest risk and, in fact, is not a
plant pest. Accordingly, the petition requesting a determination of
nonregulated status is approved, and sugar beet event H7-1 is no longer
subject to our regulations governing the
[[Page 42694]]
introduction of certain genetically engineered organisms and to the
plant pest provisions of the Plant Protection Act.
Copies of the determination of nonregulated status document and the
record of decision, as well as copies of the final plant pest risk
assessment and final EIS upon which the determination and record of
decision were based, are available as indicated in the ADDRESSES and
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT sections of this notice.
Done in Washington, DC, this 18th day of July 2012.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
Notice
[FR Doc. 2012-17819 Filed 7-19-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P