Emergency Dicamba Ban Nears

Dicamba faces a potential immediate and total row crop use ban, pending approval by the plant board and a further green light from Arkansas Gov. Hutchinson.

Early dicamba damage is alarming, particularly with plenty of passes left in the spray season.
Early dicamba damage is alarming, particularly with plenty of passes left in the spray season.
(Chris Bennett)

After a disastrous dicamba year in 2016, which saw hundreds of thousands of acres of U.S. farmland affected by off-target movement, 2017 was touted as a year of labels and precision application. However, early reports of dicamba drift pouring in across Arkansas and Mississippi make the echoes of 2016 difficult to ignore.

Reacting to the current number of alleged dicamba misuse complaints, Arkansas’ Pesticide Committee, a special committee of the Arkansas State Plant Board (ASPB), passed a motion June 16 to recommend adoption of an emergency regulation to immediately ban in-crop dicamba product use at a scheduled meeting on June 20. If passed by the full ASPB, the measure will need approval from Gov. Hutchinson, according to Adriane Barnes, communications director for the Arkansas Agriculture Department (AAD).

As of June 20, the AAD had received 135 dicamba misuse complaints across 17 counties. (Arkansas already banned Monsanto’s Xtendimax dicamba formulations on Jan. 4, 2017, but gave a green light to BASF’s Engenia product line.) “Our plant board is very busy right now and they are getting many field reports and working a lot of extra hours to handle a higher than normal volume of calls,” says Barnes.

For more detail, see Dicamba Drift Blowing Farm Trouble Again in 2017

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Jerry Gulke, president of the Gulke Group, says in a bull market it can be difficult to know whether to hold or sell because it can get volatile and emotional.
Shawn Hackett with Hackett Financial Advisors says wheat has been leading the grains higher and how long the rally can be sustained is dependent on how long the Black Sea export slowdown lasts.
At the Iowa Economic Summit, former USTR Bob Lighthizer warned farmers that China’s soy and meat buying is a short-term play, urging producers to “take off the rose-colored glasses” regarding long-term export risk.
Read Next
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App