Growers urge action on pending Mexico biotech corn ban

December 14, 2022
Corn in late fall field
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Today, presidents of 23 state corn grower groups, including the Minnesota Corn Growers Association (MCGA), sent President Biden a letter urging him to address the pending decree by Mexico that would block imports of biotech corn. Also signing the letter was National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) President Tom Haag, who farms in Eden Valley, Minnesota.

“The pending ban is based on unfounded concerns about biotech corn and use of essential herbicides by American farmers,” MCGA President Richard Syverson said in a statement. “If the decree is enacted, it would create a huge shortage in corn demand, adversely affecting Minnesota jobs and the economy. It’s also logistically improbable and would hurt the poorest and the working class people of Mexico.”

The letter encouraged the president to raise the issue during upcoming trade talks and to file a dispute under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement if Mexico doesn’t act expeditiously to withdraw the decree.

“Corn farmers are right now in the process of making planting decisions for next spring, and any additional uncertainty in the market affects their ability to appropriately respond to multiple market signals,” the corn grower leaders said. “If the decree is not completely withdrawn by the established deadline, we ask that your administration initiate a case under USMCA.”

The letter is in response to a promise by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador to end imports of biotech corn beginning in early 2024. Ninety percent of corn grown in the U.S. is biotech corn.

Mexico’s Foreign Secretary, Marcelo Ebrard, plans to visit Washington this week to discuss the issue ahead of a planned meeting on trade between Biden, President López Obrador and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in early January.

The state corn grower leaders urged Biden to raise the issue at the meeting.

“Because the stakes for farmers and rural America are so high, we are calling on you to make this issue a critical part of your January 9th meeting with President López Obrador and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau,” the letter says.

The letter detailed specific actions the president could take in the coming days.

“We are also asking that you empower Ambassador Katherine Tai to work with Secretary Vilsack to set a firm, quick timeline with Mexico to withdraw the decree or initiate a case under the biotechnology provisions of the U.S-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA), and that you do so without agreeing to a ban of any form of biotech corn, including white corn that is used for human consumption,” the group noted.

The letter also emphasized the science supporting the safe use of biotech corn.

“Decades of science show that biotech corn is safe for use,” the letter says. “Growers plant biotech corn, which is reviewed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and regulatory agencies around the world, because it saves money, reduces the use of insecticides and lowers carbon emissions. This technology also allows corn growers to plant seeds that are resistant to severe weather conditions caused by climate change.”

U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Vilsack traveled to Mexico City in late November to meet with President López Obrador about the issue, a development that was widely praised by corn growers. Vilsack emphasized during that meeting that minus a reasonable agreement, the U.S. would take action, including filing a complaint under USMCA. Corn growers have since pushed the administration for faster action.