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Federal Court Overturns 2020 Decision, Rules GMOs Must Be Regulated

 

 

In a precedential victory for food and environmental safety, a federal district court ruled on Dec. 3 that genetically engineered (GE) organisms must be regulated. The court’s ruling overturns the 2020 rule overhaul by the first Trump administration that had eliminated most government oversight over GE crops, trees and grasses.

“This is a critical victory on behalf of farmers, the planet, and scientific integrity,” said George Kimbrell, legal director for the lead plaintiff Center for Food Safety, and counsel in the case. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) “tried to hand over its job to Monsanto and the pesticide industry and the Court held that capitulation contrary to both law and science.”

The ruling is a rebuke of the first Trump administration’s efforts to practically eliminate oversight of novel GE technology and instead let industry self-regulate. Previously, nearly all GE plants went through agency approval before experimental planting and again before any commercial use.

Center for Food Safety and allies sued the USDA in 2021 to reverse this rollback, arguing that the rule change violated numerous environmental laws, including the Endangered Species Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and the Plant Protection Act.

The court held that the regulations violated the Plant Protection Act and the Administrative Procedure Act.

The court’s decision sharply criticized the defendant federal agency for its abrupt reversal after more than a decade of recognizing the harms of novel GE technology.

The court at various points held the agency decision was in “direct conflict with the conclusion of its own experts,” and was based on “perception and beliefs” that are merely “asserted as fiat untethered to a clear and sound analysis.”

Despite USDA’s repeated admissions of the need for stronger—not lesser—regulations, the rule unlawfully ignored these concerns of GE crops’ risks.

As such, the court found that the rule did not address “a single one of these issues” that the agency itself previously raised.

The court also found that the exemption of GE crops was “repudiated” by the “scientific evidence in the record,” specifically the conclusions and recommendations from the National Academies of Science.

Finally, concluding that the agency’s errors were “significant,” the court struck down the rules based on those violations alone, determining it unnecessary to yet reach the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act claims.

The plaintiffs in the case are the National Family Farm Coalition, Friends of the Earth, Pesticide Action Network, Center for Environmental Health, Center for Biological Diversity and Center for Food Safety, all represented by counsel from the Center for Food Safety…

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (childrenshealthdefense.org)

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