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  1. Food from New Plant Varieties

New Plant Variety Regulatory Information

Feed Your Mind Education and Outreach Initiative

Better understand genetically engineered foods (GMOs)

The FDA regulates human and animal food from plants, including plants produced through use of genetic engineering and genome editing, under the Federal, Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) and holds them to the same standards as all foods produced, processed, stored, shipped or sold in the United States.

Our regulation of plant biotechnology products is part of a coordinated framework that includes the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Each of these regulatory agencies has developed regulations and guidance documents to implement its authority under existing laws to help ensure the safety of plant biotechnology products. The USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) oversees the agricultural and environmental safety of planting and field testing of genetically engineered plants. The EPA registers pesticides, including those genetically engineered into food crops. As part of its process, the EPA reviews the safety of pesticides and sets tolerances or tolerance exemptions for their presence in or on food. To view information about the regulation of certain biotechnology products at USDA and EPA, please visit: Unified Website for Biotechnology Regulation.

For additional information, please visit:

FDA’s Plant Biotechnology Guidance

In 2024, the FDA issued a guidance for industry that describes how firms can voluntarily engage with the FDA before marketing food from genome-edited plants. The guidance reaffirms that the risk-based approach the FDA has taken for foods derived from new plant varieties also applies to foods from genome-edited plants. In addition, this guidance describes two processes through which they may voluntarily inform the FDA of the steps they have taken to ensure the safety of foods from their genome-edited plant varieties: voluntary premarket consultations and voluntary premarket meetings. These processes can help ease the pathway to market for foods from genome-edited plants, while keeping FDA safeguards in place.    

In 2017, the FDA published a notice titled “Genome Editing in New Plant Varieties Used for Foods” seeking public input to help inform its regulatory approach to human and animal foods derived from plants produced using genome editing. This request was in response to the development of new techniques to modify the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequences of plants and to characterize such modifications. These newer methods, collectively referred to as genome editing, include the use of nucleases and/or oligonucleotides intended to modify the plant’s DNA sequence by insertion, deletion, or substitution of nucleotides at specific locations in a plant’s genome. These methods can be used to produce a range of changes from as little as a single base-pair to the introduction of a gene from an exogenous source. The agency also asked for information on how best to engage small businesses, including those that may be considering using genome editing to produce new plant varieties for use in human or animal food.

In 1992, the FDA clarified the agency's interpretation of the application of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) with respect to human and animal foods derived from new plant varieties. The FDA provided guidance to industry on scientific and regulatory issues related to these foods. The 1992 policy applied to all foods derived from all new plant varieties, including varieties produced through traditional plant breeding as well as those developed using recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) technology. In 1996, to help developers of foods derived from new plant varieties comply with their obligations under the FD&C Act and FDA regulations, the FDA provided a set of procedures for voluntary premarket food safety consultations with the FDA.

These procedures describe a process in which a developer who intends to commercialize food from a new plant variety engages with the agency to identify and discuss relevant safety, nutritional, or other regulatory issues regarding the food. The developer then submits to FDA a summary of its scientific and regulatory assessment of the food. The FDA evaluates the submission and responds to the developer by letter.  The FDA also offers a voluntary premarket meeting process through which developers can inform the agency about certain foods from genome edited plants when a consultation is not warranted based on the food’s characteristics.

These voluntary premarket processes enable firms to engage with the FDA on the safety and legality of foods from their new plant varieties and helps to ensure that any safety or regulatory issues associated with a food from a new plant variety are resolved before commercial distribution.

To view additional information on this topic from the FDA, please visit:

Labeling of Foods from New Plant Varieties

Foods derived from new plant varieties must meet the same safety, labeling, and other regulatory requirements that apply to all foods regulated by the FDA.

If a food derived from a new plant variety has compositional differences that make it materially different from its traditional counterpart, the FDA requires that the labeling of that food disclose such differences. For example, when FDA learned during a consultation that a new canola oil had increased lauric acid content compared to conventional canola oil, we required the oil to be labeled “laurate canola oil.” Similarly, soybean oil containing higher levels of oleic acid than conventional soybean oil must be labeled “high oleic soybean oil.”

In 2016, Congress passed the National Bioengineered (BE) Food Disclosure Standard Law, directing the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Marketing Service (USDA-AMS) to establish a national mandatory standard for disclosing foods that are bioengineered. The Standard defines bioengineered foods as those that contain detectable genetic material that has been modified through certain lab techniques and cannot be created through conventional breeding or found in nature. The implementation date of the Standard is January 1, 2020, except for small food manufacturers, whose implementation date is January 1, 2021. The mandatory compliance date is January 1, 2022. To learn more, please visit the BE Disclosure page on the USDA-AMS  website.

Prior to the passage of the BE Disclosure law, the FDA issued guidance on voluntary labeling indicating whether foods have or have not been derived from genetically engineered plants. In light of the passage of this law, FDA is reviewing this guidance to consider what additional or new recommendations may be needed for the kinds of products or statements, including claims of non-GE content, that are not covered by the BE Disclosure law. To view the guidance, please visit: Guidance for Industry: Voluntary Labeling Indicating Whether Foods Have or Have Not Been Derived from Genetically Engineered Plants.

International Activities on Foods from New Plant Varieties

The FDA participates in international activities related to foods derived from new plant varieties including the safety assessment and regulation of foods from genetically engineered and genome edited plants.  As part of these activities, FDA  actively shares information with other participating countries.

 
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