NAMA News

National Association of Wheat Growers, North American Millers’ Association and American Bakers Association Address Florida Glyphosate Announcement

In response to the recent announcement by Florida officials regarding glyphosate and bread products, the National Association of Wheat Growers (NAWG), North American Millers’ Association (NAMA) and American Bakers Association (ABA) issued the following joint statement:

Our nation’s farmers, millers and bakers proudly serve families and communities as they champion safe, consistent, accessible and affordable bread. Food safety is the top priority for the grain we grow, the flour we mill and the bread we bake for all Americans. We appreciate Healthy Florida First’s stated purpose of improving the lives of Floridians. Unfortunately, their recent announcement needlessly scares consumers about trace levels of glyphosate that don’t present genuine risks. Glyphosate is regulated and continuously reviewed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ensure levels are safe for all consumers, from adults to children.

Bread products remain safe.

We support transparent, nationally consistent standards that protect consumers without undermining confidence in safe, consistent, accessible, and affordable foods.

Additional Background: The safety of glyphosate has been evaluated extensively through decades of scientific research and regulatory review in the United States, and several other countries including: the European Union, Australia, Korea, Canada, New Zealand, and Japan. The U.S. EPA affirms that glyphosate, when used in accordance with approved agricultural practices, does not pose a risk to human health through dietary exposure. EPA has reviewed and reassessed its safety and uses, including undergoing registration review, a program that re-evaluates each registered pesticide on a 15-year cycle. Departing from this nationally consistent, science-based approach in favor of isolated testing results undermines scientific consensus and distorts public understanding of food safety. NAWG, NAMA and ABA will continue to work with federal regulators to ensure that food safety policy remains grounded in standardized, national scientific consensus.

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