2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11248-021-00257-8
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Regulatory approaches for genome edited agricultural plants in select countries and jurisdictions around the world

Abstract: Genome editing in agriculture and food is leading to new, improved crops and other products. Depending on the regulatory approach taken in each country or region, commercialization of these crops and products may or may not require approval from the respective regulatory authorities. This paper describes the regulatory landscape governing genome edited agriculture and food products in a selection of countries and regions.

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Cited by 85 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…Regulatory alignment and consistency will be important for the use of technologies like genome editing to be broadly adopted and applied in a manner akin to the widespread use of common plant breeding techniques like classical mutagenesis and other techniques used to introduce genetic variation into plant genomes. It has been noted and clearly articulated in the literature (Menz et al 2020;Entine et al 2021;Turnbull et al 2021) that currently, there is a lack of regulatory harmonization and consistency around the world with regard to the status of genome-edited plant products. At this point, there are emerging general trends (certain edits like deletions are generally considered to be exempt from GMO regulations), but there is clearly more global "disharmony" than harmonization in the regulatory treatment of genomeedited plant products.…”
Section: The Foundation and Principles Of Gmo Regulatory Regimesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regulatory alignment and consistency will be important for the use of technologies like genome editing to be broadly adopted and applied in a manner akin to the widespread use of common plant breeding techniques like classical mutagenesis and other techniques used to introduce genetic variation into plant genomes. It has been noted and clearly articulated in the literature (Menz et al 2020;Entine et al 2021;Turnbull et al 2021) that currently, there is a lack of regulatory harmonization and consistency around the world with regard to the status of genome-edited plant products. At this point, there are emerging general trends (certain edits like deletions are generally considered to be exempt from GMO regulations), but there is clearly more global "disharmony" than harmonization in the regulatory treatment of genomeedited plant products.…”
Section: The Foundation and Principles Of Gmo Regulatory Regimesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The legal status of a genome editing product depends on norms established at a country level based on a discriminate process to determine whether the final product is a Living Modified Organism (LMO) or not. For countries like Argentina, Australia, Colombia, Brazil, and the United States, a variety is equivalent to conventional in the absence of a foreign DNA (Entine et al, 2021;Gatica-Arias, 2020). For details, see Table 6.…”
Section: Regulatory Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, the regulation of genome editing is rather fragmented, uncomplete and inconsistent across countries (Entine et al 2021;Charo and Greely 2015). In the US, genome editing is regulated by the 1986 Coordinated Framework for the Regulation of Biotechnology, which was updated following the "Memorandum on Modernizing the Regulatory System for Biotechnology Products" issued by the Executive Office of the US President in 2015 and the "Executive Order on Modernizing the Regulatory Framework for Agricultural Biotechnology Products" issued by the US President in 2019.…”
Section: The Challenge Of Regulating Genome Editingmentioning
confidence: 99%