USDA Economic Research Service Data Sets
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2002 Farm Bill

ERS Analysis:
Methyl Bromide

Contents
 
 

Key Changes

The 2002 Farm Act adds a provision directing the Secretary of Agriculture to determine whether to authorize methyl bromide treatments required by State, local, or tribal authorities to prevent the introduction, establishment, or spread of plant pests or noxious weeds as official controls or requirements.

Economic Implications

New provisions for use of methyl bromide within the Research Title deal with exemptions from phasing out methyl bromide use. The use of methyl bromide, a fumigant, is being phased out worldwide under the Montreal Protocol and in the United States under the Clean Air Act. However, use for quarantine and preshipment treatments, which are identified by a national authority, is exempt from the phaseout.

It was unclear under the Montreal Protocol whether methyl bromide treatments required by State, local, or tribal authorities to prevent the introduction, establishment, or spread of plant pests or noxious weeds would be included in the exemption. The 2002 Farm Act empowers the Secretary to authorize methyl bromide treatments required by State, local, or tribal authorities as official controls or requirements, which might exempt them from the methyl bromide phaseout under the Montreal Protocol and Clean Air Act. The agricultural nursery industry sought this change because some States, such as California, and other authorities require treatments to prevent the spread of pests through nursery stock.

For More Information...

 

For more information, contact: Kelly Day-Rubenstein or Paul Heisey

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Updated date: September 5, 2002