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44 SEEDWORLD.COM JUNE 2015 From Your Land to Our Land Your Customers Depend On Quality Seed Our Customers Rely On Quality Bags Multiwall Bags Polywoven Bags Bulk Bags AND WHEN IT COMES TO RELIABILITY IN PRODUCTS AND SERVICES EL DORADO PACKAGING NEVER DISAPPOINTS. We Build Our Bags To Be Tough. We Build Our Bags Just For You. BUILT TOUGH BUILT FOR YOU 1-800-432-BAGS2247 multiwallbags.com EL DORADOP a c k a g i n g I n c . TM AND WHEN IT COMES TO RELIABILITY IN PRODUCTS AND SERVICES EL DORADO PACKAGING NEVER DISAPPOINTS. We Build Our Bags To Be Tough. Quality Product with Quality Service and one in commercialization according to McCaslin. At Monsanto and Syngenta their product portfolio is much more expansive and results in a pipeline with 50 to 60 traits in it at one time covering many different varieties. Gaining Regulatory Approval A company can evaluate whether its a good time to launch a trait but its not just up to them. They have to move the trait through the regulatory system both domestically and internationally before releasing a new product. The U.S. Department of Agricultures Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service APHIS allows breeders to pursue field testing of new traits. After undergoing years of field tests extensive review and determination by APHIS that unconfined release of a genetically mod- ified organism does not pose a significant risk to agriculture or the environment the organism in question is no longer considered a regulated article and can be moved and planted without APHIS authorization according to The Seed Industry in U.S. Agriculture published by the USDA. ate amount of data to submit as a package to APHIS Martin says the government has been predictable in returning the regulatory approval to sell a trait in the United States. When exporting traits companies work with industry associations such as the National Corn Growers Association and American Soybean Association to determine the best process to follow. Those associations work very closely with the industry to advise us on which countries need to approve the trait in order for the grain containing that trait to move freely in the international grain trade Martin explains. A core set of regulations exist that every country has agreed to use when evaluating seed traits but each country is also allowed to have its own set of spe- cific requirements. There are nuances in the way certain countries want the data presented but for the most part there is a common set of data and require- ments used across the world according to Veenhuizen. Rising Uncertainty with China Obtaining international regulatory The U.S. has a system that is prob- ably the most functional and predictable in the world Martin says. The generally accepted protocol to bring a new trait to the market even to the export market has been a very systematic approach that has worked well in the past. As long as companies do the right work up-front and collect the appropri- It should be concerning to all of U.S. agriculture to see a significant new technology impeded by the actions of a single country. Duane Martin