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Over-the-Top Dicamba Gets Two Year Registration from EPA

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WASHINGTON — Last week, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established the strongest protections in  agency history for over-the-top (OTT) dicamba application on dicamba-tolerant cotton and soybean crops. This decision responds directly to the strong advocacy of America’s cotton and soybean farmers, particularly growers across the Cotton Belt, who have been clear and consistent about the critical challenges they face without access to this tool for controlling resistant weeds in their growing crops. Dicamba has already been on the market and available for sale and in wide, continuous use on farms across the United States regardless of and prior to today’s announcement, which is specifically focused on OTT application.

President Trump has remained deeply committed to supporting America’s farmers and rural communities. This action reflects his administration’s commitment to ensuring farmers have the tools they need to succeed while protecting the environment with the strongest safeguards ever imposed on OTT dicamba use. Cotton farmers across the southern United States have been particularly vocal about why they need OTT dicamba as herbicide-resistant weeds like Palmer amaranth have become nearly impossible to control with other available tools, threatening crop yields and farm viability. These “super weeds” can grow 3 inches per day and destroy entire fields. Without effective weed management during the growing season, these producers face devastating economic losses. This temporary approval reflects the voices of farmers who depend on this tool using informed restrictions and safety measures.

From day one of this review, EPA committed to gold-standard science and radical transparency. We conducted a thorough pesticide evaluation, using the best available data and reviewing hundreds of publicly available independent, peer-reviewed studies and real-world field results to conduct a comprehensive human health and ecological risk assessment. To be clear, these studies involved pesticide applicators with decades of intensive exposure, not typical consumers. EPA took these studies seriously, carefully considered them in our risk assessments, and built extra protections into the registration to reduce worker contact with the product.

Additionally, the ecological risks associated with dicamba drift and volatility are real. If not carefully mitigated, off-target movement of dicamba can damage sensitive plants and impact neighboring farms and natural ecosystems. These concerns are exactly why the strongest safeguards ever are essential.

When applied according to the new label instructions, EPA’s analysis found no unreasonable risk to human health and the environment from OTT dicamba use. EPA recognizes that previous drift issues created legitimate concerns, and designed these new label restrictions to directly address them, including cutting the amount of dicamba that can be used annually in half, doubling required safety agents, requiring conservation practices to protect endangered species, and restricting applications during high temperatures when exposure and volatility risks increase. This determination supports a time limited approval covering only the next two growing seasons and will be subject to further review.

We will continue to track real-world outcomes, and adjust course quickly if new information emerges. EPA’s commitment is clear: protect communities and ecosystems with uncompromising science while providing farmers the tools they need to succeed responsibly.

EPA is requiring an extensive suite of mitigation measures, each designed to reduce drift, minimize volatility, and protect ecosystems:

New Restrictions for 2026 Registration

*The 2020 registration permitted up to four applications of 0.5 lbs./acre (only two could be over-the-top) for a total of 2.0 lbs. of dicamba annually.

Legacy Restrictions Retained on the 2026 Registration

***The distance of downwind spray drift buffers may be decreased if other label-approved mitigations are used (use of a hooded sprayer, a downwind windbreak, etc.)

****A list of dicamba-sensitive plants and crops is provided on the label.

EPA is making clear that these restrictions are not optional suggestions. They are enforceable legal requirements. Applicators who fail to follow label directions are subject to significant penalties under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), including civil fines and, in cases of knowing violations, criminal prosecution. EPA will work with state enforcement to actively monitor compliance, and violations will be met with serious consequences.

We will continue to track real-world outcomes, require manufacturers to provide additional data if necessary, and will not hesitate to adjust restrictions or revoke approvals quickly if new information emerges showing risks are not being adequately controlled. This two-season limited approval provides a critical checkpoint. EPA will comprehensively review performance data, incident reports, and environmental monitoring results before considering any future approvals.

Throughout the review process, farmers, workers, environmental organizations, and the public submitted thousands of comments, all of which EPA carefully considered. This decision reflects a careful balance between protecting ecological health and community well-being and supporting farmers’ pressing need for effective weed-control tools.

EPA’s highest priority remains safeguarding human health and the environment. This registration marks an important milestone in the agency’s ongoing work to strengthen pesticide oversight, enhance safety through transparency, and ensure that all regulatory decisions are guided by the best available science.

SOURCE: EPA News Release