U.S. experts doubt EPA curbs on Monsanto,
BASF herbicides will halt crop damage
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[October 14, 2017]
By Emily Flitter and Tom Polansek
NEW YORK/CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. weed
specialists doubted on Friday that new federal restrictions on the use
of a controversial weed killer, sold by Monsanto Co and BASF, will
prevent recurrences next year of crop damage linked to the chemical.
The impact of the rules limiting sprayings of dicamba herbicides,
announced by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), may affect
Monsanto's biggest-ever biotech seed launch - soybeans engineered to
resist the chemical.
The EPA's new limits focus on the application issues and do not address
volatilization, herbicide experts and farmers said.
Monsanto proposed the changes and won support for them from the agency,
according to a company statement.
Growers across the U.S. farm belt said this summer that dicamba affected
areas other than where it was sprayed on the Monsanto soybeans, called
Xtend, damaging millions of acres of crops that could not tolerate the
herbicides.
Monsanto has blamed much of the damage on improper application of
dicamba. Specialists, though, say the weed killer is risky because they
can vaporize and drift across fields, a process called volatilization.
"Nothing in these new restrictions addresses volatility, and that's
still an issue," said Aaron Hager, a weed scientist and professor at the
University of Illinois.
Under EPA's guidelines, only certified pesticide applicators, or people
under their supervision, will be allowed to spray dicamba formulations
manufactured by Monsanto and BASF next year.
That restriction may not do much to reduce crop damage related to
sprayings, though, because many farmers and commercial applicators are
already certified, experts said.
The EPA also said it was trimming the hours during each day, and
lowering the maximum allowable wind speed during which dicamba may be
sprayed in 2018. Additionally, farmers must keep records proving they
are complying with label instructions.
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A logo is seen on the facade of the BASF plant and former Ciba
production site in Schweizerhalle near Basel, Switzerland July 7,
2009. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
"Since we proposed this in a voluntary fashion, we're pleased with
it," Scott Partridge, Monsanto's vice president of global strategy,
said about the EPA rules in an interview.
DowDuPont Inc sells Monsanto's formulation under its own brand name.
A BASF spokeswoman said the company was "pleased growers will
continue to have access" to its herbicides.
The EPA will monitor the impact of the restrictions to help
determine whether it should allow farmers to spray dicamba after
2018 on crops that have emerged from the ground.
"I hope it does a lot of good," Ples Spradley, a pesticide
specialist at the University of Arkansas, said about the changes. "I
have my doubts."
Jonas Oxgaard, an analyst for the investment management firm
Bernstein, said the rules could slow the adoption of Monsanto's
Xtend soybean seeds by making it harder for farmers to find times
when they are permitted to spray dicamba.
For 2018, Monsanto predicts Xtend soybeans will be grown on about 40
million U.S. acres, or more than 40 percent of all soybean
plantings. Oxgaard estimated Xtend soybean plantings at 30 to 35
million acres.
Dan Henebry, a farmer in Buffalo, Illinois, is among those who have
ordered Xtend soybean seeds. He said he would plant them next spring
under the EPA's tighter rules for dicamba use, but that the new
restriction on wind speed will make it more difficult to spray.
"You're playing with Mother Nature," he said, "and some days she
just does not cooperate."
(Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Bernadette Baum)
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