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22 February 2012 APPLICATION FOR LICENCE FOR INTENTIONAL RELEASE OF GMOs INTO THE ENVIRONMENT: Application No. DIR 115 SUMMARY INFORMATION Project Title: Limited and controlled release of cotton genetically modified for enhanced fibre yield1 Applicant: The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Common name of the parent organism: Cotton Scientific name of the parent organism: Gossypium hirsutum L. Modified trait(s): Enhanced fibre yield Antibiotic resistance as selectable marker Identity of the gene(s) responsible for the modified trait(s): GhMYB25, GhMYB25-like and GhHD1 genes from cotton (G. hirsutum L.) for enhancing fibre yield. Proposed Location(s): One site per growing season in Narrabri, NSW. Proposed Release Size: Up to 0.5 ha per growing season Proposed Release Dates: August 2012–August 2015 nptII from the bacterium Escherichia coli for antibiotic resistance. Introduction The Gene Technology Act 2000 (the Act) in conjunction with the Gene Technology Regulations 2001, an inter-governmental agreement and corresponding legislation that is being enacted in each State and Territory, comprise Australia’s nationally consistent regulatory system for gene technology. Its objective is to protect the health and safety of people, and the environment, by identifying risks posed by or as a result of gene technology, and managing those risks by regulating certain dealings with genetically modified organisms (GMOs). The Act establishes a statutory officer, the Gene Technology Regulator (the Regulator), to administer and make decisions under the legislation. The Regulator is supported by the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator (OGTR), an Australian Government regulatory agency located within the Health and Ageing portfolio. The legislation sets out requirements for considering applications for licences for dealings with GMOs, including matters that the Regulator must take into account before deciding whether or not to issue a licence. The Regulator’s Risk Analysis Framework2 outlines the assessment process that will be followed. The title of the licence application submitted by CSIRO is ‘Evaluation of GM traits to enhance cotton fibre yield’. The Risk Analysis Framework and further information on the assessment of licence applications is available from the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator (OGTR). Free call 1800 181 030 or at <http://www.ogtr.gov.au>. 1 2 The application and the proposed dealings The Regulator has received an application from CSIRO for a licence for dealings involving the intentional release of genetically modified (GM) cotton into the Australian environment on a limited scale under controlled conditions. CSIRO proposes to release up to eight GM cotton varieties with enhanced expression of up to three cotton transcription factor genes involved in fibre development. Enhancing expression of these genes is expected to improve fibre yield. The purpose of the trial is to evaluate the potential for increasing cotton fibre yield under field conditions. The applicant proposes to limit the trial to 1 site per growing season in Narrabri, New South Wales between August 2012 and August 2015. The maximum area of a site will be 0.5 ha. The applicant has proposed a number of control measures to restrict the spread and persistence of the GMOs and their introduced genetic material that will be considered in the assessment of this application, including: locating the trial site at a location not prone to flooding or surface run-off surrounding the trial site by a 20 m wide pollen trap of non-GM cotton locating the trial site at least 50 m away from cotton lines used for breeding purposes harvesting and ginning of GM cotton from the trial separately from any other cotton cleaning of equipment, trial site and adjacent areas following harvest cleaning of gins following ginning of GM cotton destroying seed not used for evaluation or seed increase post-harvest monitoring of the trial site, pollen trap area and any area used to clean equipment for a period of 12 months and destroying any volunteer GM cotton transporting and storing all GM plant material according to the Regulator’s Guidelines for the Transport, Storage and Disposal of GMOs not allowing GM plant material to enter the commercial human food or animal feed supply. Parent organism The parent organism, cultivated cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), is exotic to Australia but is grown as an agricultural crop in New South Wales and southern and central Queensland, and on a trial basis in northern Queensland and the Northern Territory. Commercial cultivation of cotton resumed in the Ord river irrigation area in Western Australia in 2011 after almost 30 years. G. hirsutum cultivar Cocker 315 has been utilized to develop the GM cotton lines proposed for release. This cultivar has been adapted to tissue culture conditions and can be readily modified by standard genetic technologies. However, it is not commercially grown in Australia. The genetic modification and its effect The eight cotton varieties proposed for release are genetically modified by introduction of additional copies of one or more of three cotton genes, GhMYB25, GhMYB25-like and GhHD1. These introduced genes are under control of regulatory sequences that will lead to their overexpression either constitutively (ie. throughout the plant) or in a seed specific manner. Both GhMYB25 and GhMYB25-like encode proteins in the myeloblastosis (MYB) family of transcription factors, while GhHD1 encodes a homeodomain (HD) protein-like transcription 2 factor. All three genes are preferentially expressed in cotton ovules at the onset of fibre cell development, have very low expression in the ovules of fibreless mutants and have been implicated in cotton fibre development. Higher expression of these genes in cotton is expected to increase fibre yield. Method of genetic modification Six of the eight GM cotton varieties proposed to be released were generated by Agrobacteriummediated gene transformation, which is a well established method of plant transformation for number of plant species including cotton. These lines over-express any one of the GhMYB, GhMYB25-like or GhHD1 genes in a constitutive or seed-specific manner. The remaining two varieties will be developed by cross-breeding between these six GM cotton varieties Previous releases of the same or similar GMOs There has been no previous release of these GM cotton varieties in Australia. GM cotton containing genes for herbicide tolerance and/or insect resistance, fungal disease resistance, tolerance to water logging, increased water use efficiency and altered seed oil composition have been approved in Australia for limited and controlled release. In addition, GM cotton containing genes for insect resistance and/or herbicide tolerance are approved for commercial release in Australia under the trade names Bollgard II®, Roundup Ready®, Roundup Ready Flex®, Liberty Link® and WideStrike™. There have been no reports of adverse effects on human health and safety or the environment resulting from any of these releases. Suitability of Applicant Section 43(2)(f) of the Act requires the Regulator to be satisfied regarding the suitability of the applicant to hold a licence as a pre-requisite for considering DIR applications. The matters to be considered are outlined in section 58 of the Act and include capacity to meet the conditions of a licence, relevant convictions and revocation of a licence or permit held under law relating to the health and safety of people or the environment. The Regulator has determined that CSIRO currently meets the suitability requirements and will verify this continues to be the case prior to making any decision regarding the issuing of a licence. Consultation process for this DIR application The Regulator has decided that the application qualifies as a limited and controlled release, under section 50A of the Act. The principal purpose of the application is to enable the conduct of experiments and the applicant has proposed limits on the size and duration of the release and controls to restrict the spread and persistence of both the GMOs and their genetic material in the environment. This means that the Regulator is not required to consult on the assessment of this application until after a consultation Risk Assessment and Risk Management Plan (RARMP) has been prepared in accordance with section 51 of the Act. In the interim, copies of the application are available on request from the OGTR. Please quote application number DIR 115. The Regulator will seek comment on the consultation RARMP from the public as well as a wide range of experts, agencies and authorities including the Gene Technology Technical Advisory Committee, State and Territory Governments, Australian Government agencies and the Minister 3 for the Environment. The RARMP will then be finalised, taking into account matters raised relating to risks to human health and safety and the environment, and form the basis of his decision whether or not to issue a licence. At this stage, the RARMP is expected to be released for comment in May 2012. The public will be invited to provide submissions on the RARMP via advertisements in the media and direct mail to anyone registered on the OGTR mailing list. The RARMP and other related documents will be available on the OGTR website, or in hard copy from the OGTR. If you have any questions about the application or the assessment process, or wish to register on the mailing list, please contact the OGTR at: The Office of the Gene Technology Regulator, MDP 54 GPO Box 9848 Canberra ACT 2601 Telephone: 1800 181 030 Facsimile: 02 6271 4202 E-mail: [email protected] Website http://www.ogtr.gov.au 4