USDA Invites Ideas on Easier GMO Plant Regulations
Published Date: 5/15/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The USDA wants your thoughts on how to handle rules for genetically modified plants and organisms under the Plant Protection Act. This is a chance for farmers, businesses, and local governments to help shape future rules that could make some modified organisms easier to approve or regulate differently. Comments are open until June 15, 2026, so don’t miss your chance to weigh in—this could impact how quickly new products reach the market and affect related costs.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 2 mixed.
Possible Risk-Based Deregulation of GM Organisms
USDA is asking whether it should use a risk-based approach that might make some genetically modified plants and organisms easier to approve or regulate differently. This could change which modified organisms need permits or notifications under the Plant Protection Act and would shape future rulemaking.
May Change Time-to-Market and Costs
USDA says comments could affect how quickly new modified products reach the market and could affect related costs. Changes to the regulatory framework could speed commercialization for some developers or change the compliance costs they face.
Small Entities May Face Disproportionate Burdens
USDA specifically asks whether the SECURE rule and the current 7 CFR part 340 imposed disproportionate burdens on smaller entities developing regulated plants or microorganisms. If so, small developers could face higher relative costs or barriers when conducting field trials or moving to commercialization.
Public Comment Opportunity (Deadline June 15, 2026)
USDA invites stakeholders—including farmers, industry representatives, and state and local governments—to submit comments by June 15, 2026 (docket USDA-2026-0133). This is an opportunity for affected groups to suggest changes that could shape future rules on modified organisms.
Potential Shift from Part 340 to Part 330
USDA is asking whether APHIS could regulate modified organisms under 7 CFR part 330 instead of 7 CFR part 340 and asks commenters to consider trade implications and what changes to part 330 might be needed. Such a shift could alter how imports, interstate movements, and releases are handled.
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Key Dates
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