January 25, 2013
Dow AgroSciences awaits approval for Enlist Duo herbicide in Canada
As it awaits approval from regulatory agencies, Dow AgroSciences has not scrapped plans for a limited launch of its 2,4-D/glyphosate-tolerant Enlist corn in Canada this spring.
Canadian regulators have already approved the Enlist herbicide tolerance trait for launch, in both corn and soy. However, Dow's Enlist seed-and-chemical package for corn growers also calls for release of its combination 2,4-D-and-glyphosate herbicide, Enlist Duo -- which has not yet received approval from the federal Pest Management Regulatory Agency.
Furthermore, the Enlist trait has not yet received approval from the USDA, nor that country's Environmental Protection Agency, which from an export marketing standpoint could leave some Canadian growers unable to ship their Enlist corn south.
"Our Canadian intentions remain that we plan to conduct a limited-scale commercial launch in Canada for spring 2013," the company said in a statement this week. However, "we continue to await the approval of Enlist Duo herbicide in Canada, which is essential before we launch the system."
The company said it's also closely monitoring the approval process for the corn trait in the US "as we move to a final commercialisation timing decision in Canada out of respect for movement of grain between the two countries."
If the US seed registration and/or the Canadian herbicide approval do not appear by this spring, the company will make its decision accordingly, said Jeff Loessin, Dow Agro's Canadian portfolio marketing leader for crop protection in Calgary.
"The (Enlist) technology is sound, the science is sound," he said, but US and Canadian regulators, for unknown reasons, have moved at different paces to approve it.
If Dow Agro decides to hold back the release of Enlist corn until 2014, corn growers who've expressed interest in the Enlist seed will get a fully-approved corn seed variety with "equal" genetics to Enlist in terms of glyphosate tolerance, disease and insect resistance and other attributes, Loessin said.
The company has set aside seed with and without the Enlist trait for this purpose, he added. "We are still hopeful that all the necessary approvals will be received in time to allow a limited commercial launch in Canada in 2013," Dow added in its statement.
Dow for months has touted the Enlist system not only as a way to prolong the usefulness of other herbicides and herbicide-tolerant crops by broadening herbicide rotations, but also as a rival to other herbicide-tolerant cropping systems. "If the release does not happen this spring, there are other tools which growers in Canada's corn belt -- largely in Ontario and Quebec -- may use to deal with herbicide-resistant weeds", Loessin said.
Use of Group 2 (ALS/AHAS inhibitor) herbicides to control such weeds has led to a climb in Group 2-resistant weed populations, which had become less prevalent in fields after the introduction of Monsanto's Roundup Ready glyphosate-tolerant traits, he said.
As for Enlist soy in Canada, Dow's plan remains to release those varieties in 2015, to make sure the approvals are first secured to export the beans to markets such as China.
Corn grown in Canada generally stays in Canada, winding up either in livestock stomachs or in an ethanol plant on this side of the border, Loessin said. Canada's soy, however, are an export crop by comparison and would not get far without approvals for food or feed use in importing nations.