In May, the US Department of Agriculture approved requests by
Arborgen, a company created by MeadWestvaco, International Paper, and Rubicon, a New Zealand
company, to plant 260,000 genetically engineered, sub-tropical Eucalyptus trees throughout the
South.
According to the Environmental Assessment conducted by the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS), the trees planted will be genetically modified in the following
ways:
Arborgen began testing these trees in 2008 on 57 acres in the South, though trees on only two of the plots were allowed to flower. Although the exact location of the sites for the upcoming expanded trials are considered confidential business information and not publically available, 28 sites have been approved. All but a holding area in South Carolina will be allowed to flower. In the first round, 5 trials were terminated; Arborgen does not have current plans to continue trials on these sites.
Read more on genetically modified trees in subsequent issues of Forest2Mill.
Additional Stories from the July 2010 Forest2Mill Newsletter:
Industry at a
Glance
Housing
Market Update
Will New
Industrial Boiler MACT Standards Affect You? Act Now.
Pacific Northwest
Update
Biomass
Harvest Guidelines