Firm to Farm: Update on Dicamba and the EPA

Updated Dicamba information is the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV’s agri-legal expert Roger McEowen with the Washburn School of Law.

Waterhemp and weeds wilting and dying in soybean field after dicamba herbicide application.

Waterhemp and weeds wilting and dying in soybean field after dicamba herbicide application.

My blog article from February 11 discussed the Arizona federal district court opinion vacating the registrations of three Dicamba pesticide products. Since then, the EPA made an “existing stocks” ruling that will help some producers through the 2024 growing season. That makes an update in order.

Updated Dicamba information – that’s the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV’s agri-legal expert Roger McEowen with the Washburn School of Law.

Background

Farmers have used Dicamba for decades on broadleaf plants and, more recently, to control weeds that have become glyphosate-tolerant. However, until 2016 the use of Dicamba was used only as a pre-emergent herbicide. It was then that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) registered certain low-volatility forms of Dicamba that had a low likelihood of drift problems for over-the-top usage on growing soybean and cotton crops resulting from Dicamba-resistant seeds. The EPA was sued because the registration process violated the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and the Endangered Species Act (ESA).

The case became moot by the registration’s expiration, but when the EPA again registered Dicamba for over-the-top use in 2018, a new case was filed. In 2020, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit vacated the registrations for XtendiMax, Engenia and FeXapan. National Family Farm Coalition v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, 960 F.3d 1120 (9th Cir. 2020). The court determined that the EPA had failed to follow the procedural rules of the Administrative Procedure Act, the FIFRA and the ESA. Those statutes require the EPA to provide public notice and a chance for the public to make comments and attend a hearing on the registration issue. The court also said that the EPA failed to assess risks and costs for non-users of over-the-top Dicamba.

The EPA again issued another registration for over-the-top Dicamba use for the 2020 and 2021 growing seasons and made further amendments in 2022 and 2023 along with approval for new uses.

2024 Court Decision

On February 6, 2024, a federal district court vacated the registrations of three Dicamba products (XtendiMax, Engenia, and Tavium) that the EPA had approved for over-the-top applications. Center for Biological Diversity v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, No. CV-20-00555-TUC-DCB, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20307 (D. Ariz. Feb. 6, 2024). The decision came at a time when many soybean and cotton farmers have already purchased seeds and chemicals and will soon be planting the 2024 crop. The court said the EPA didn’t follow the notice and comment provisions of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) when it issued the registrations and also violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (and the Endangered Species Act) by not allowing public input on whether over-the-top Dicamba has unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.

The ruling canceled any benefits of planting Dicamba seeds, with the concern that there might not be enough supply of other traits to replace the Dicamba market share. The immediate impact of the ruling was that it could force farmers to plant Dicamba trait soybeans or cotton without the correct chemical to utilize the gene, resulting in the likely use of alternatives. Those alternatives could, in turn, magnify the known issues of the Dicamba chemical problems.

Note: While the timing of the court’s decision was awful, the result is good overall in that it held the “feet” of the EPA to the “fire” of the administrative process. It also raised the question of whether the EPA deliberately violated the public notice and comment procedures that are clearly established in the law. It’s difficult to believe that the EPA lawyers, particularly after losing in the Ninth Circuit on virtually the same issue in 2020, didn’t know that failing to follow the procedural rules for approving the registrations would lead to the registrations being invalidated.

EPA reaction. On February 14, the EPA issued an order to allow existing stocks of XtendiMax, Engenia, and Tavium to be applied directly onto crops so long as the pesticides were “labeled, packaged, and released for shipment” before the court’s decision. The order will allow these products purchased before February 6 to be used this growing season. The EPA order also provides instructions for how to dispose of unwanted or unused dicamba products.

The Future

What does the future hold for over-the-top Dicamba? Of course, the EPA could appeal the court’s decision, but any appeal would be to the Ninth Circuit. Going back to the same court on the same shortcomings as in the 2020 decision probably wouldn’t end well for the EPA. Perhaps a better idea is for the EPA to re-register over-the-top use of Dicamba by actually following the law’s requirements for providing public notice and comment and allowing the public to attend a hearing on the registration.

Related Stories: Firm to Farm
A Kansas Court of Appeals ruling confirms that premarital agreements can waive future homestead rights, impacting farm succession planning, blended-family estates, property rights, fiduciaries, and agricultural attorneys statewide.
Protecting your water is no longer just about ensuring next year’s crop; it is about defending the fundamental constitutional rights that secure the future of American agriculture.
The Agri Stats settlement may prove to be one of the most consequential agricultural antitrust cases in decades.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Farm legal expert Roger McEowen highlights the legal challenges surrounding stray voltage, a recent court decision, and what it means for agricultural producers.
Rising costs are significantly extending walnut profitability timelines.
Michael Cliver discusses his recent visit to the White House with the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, and the Trump Administration’s “Working Families Tax Cuts” impact on ranching families.
PLC and NCBA Chief Counsel Kaitlynn Glover reacts to the USDA’s new Grazing Action Plan, regulatory relief for ranchers, and the industry’s efforts to improve access to public lands.
Secretary Rollins is signaling a possible reopening of the southern border to Mexican feeder cattle as officials work to manage the threat of the New World Screwworm.
On this week’s Rural Health Matters, Dr. Jeffrey Gold raises awareness about Parkinson’s disease, shares insights on early detection, and offers guidance for patients and families in rural communities.