Pest Management Regulatory Agency
17 April 2013
ISSN: 1925-0843 (PDF version)
Catalogue number: H113-24/2013-21E-PDF (PDF version)
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Under the authority of the
Pest Control Products Act, Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) has concluded that the addition of new uses on greenhouse eggplants to the product label of Distance Insect Growth Regulator, containing technical grade pyriproxyfen, is acceptable. The specific uses approved in Canada are detailed on the label of Distance Insect Growth Regulator, Pest Control Products Act Registration Number 28414.
The evaluation of this pyriproxyfen application indicated that the end-use product has merit and value and the human health and environmental risks associated with the new uses are acceptable. Details regarding the registration can be found in the corresponding Evaluation Report that is available in the Pesticides and Pest Management section of Health Canada’s website, under Public Registry, Pesticide Product Information DatabaseFootnote 1.
Before registering a pesticide for food use in Canada, the PMRA must determine the quantity of residues that are likely to remain in or on the food when the pesticide is used according to label directions and that such residues will not be a concern to human health. This quantity is then legally established as a maximum residue limit (MRL). An MRL applies to the identified raw agricultural food commodity as well as to any processed food product that contains it, except where separate MRLs are specified for the raw agricultural commodity and a processed product made from it.
Consultation on the proposed MRLs for pyriproxyfen is being conducted via this document (see Next Steps).
To comply with Canada's international trade obligations, consultation on the proposed MRL is also being conducted internationally by notifying the
World Trade Organization, as coordinated by the
Standards Council of Canada.
The proposed MRLs in Canada in or on food, to be added to the MRLs already legally established for pyriproxyfen, are as follows.
| Common Name | Residue Definition | MRL(Table 1 footnote ppm) | Food Commodity |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Table 1 footnotes
| |||
| Pyriproxyfen | 2-[1-methyl-2-(4-phenoxyphenoxy)ethoxy]pyridine | 0.8 | African eggplants, eggplants, pea eggplants, Scarlet eggplants |
MRLs established in Canada may be found using the
Maximum Residue Limit Database on the Maximum Residue Limits for Pesticides webpage. The database allows users to search for pesticide(s) or for food commodity(ies).
MRLs may vary from one country to another for a number of reasons, including differences in pesticide use patterns and the locations of the field crop trials used to generate residue chemistry data.
MRLs may vary from one country to another for a number of reasons, including differences in pesticide use patterns and the locations of the field crop trials used to generate residue chemistry data. Table 2 compares the MRLs proposed for pyriproxyfen in Canada with the corresponding tolerance established in the United States. American tolerances are listed in the
Electronic Code of Federal Regulations, 40 CFR Part 180, by pesticide. A Codex MRLFootnote 2 has not been established for pyriproxyfen in or on eggplants. A listing of established Codex MRLs is available on the Codex Alimentarius
Pesticide Residues in Food website, by pesticide or commodity.
| Food Commodity | Canadian MRL (ppm) | American Tolerance (ppm) | Codex MRL (ppm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| African eggplants, eggplants, pea eggplants, Scarlet eggplants | 0.8 | 0.8 (Vegetable, fruiting, group 8-10) | Not Established |
The PMRA invites the public to submit written comments on the proposed MRLs for pyriproxyfen up to 75 days from the date of publication of this document. Please forward your comments to Publications. The PMRA will consider all comments received before making a final decision on the proposed MRL. Comments received will be addressed in a separate document linked to this PMRL. The established MRL will be legally in effect as of the date that they are entered into the
Maximum Residue Limit Database.
The relevant report can be accessed by selecting Programs and Special Actions/Minor Use/Historical and requesting the Evaluation Report found under Application Number 2011-1537.
The Codex Alimentarius Commission is an international organization under the auspices of the United Nations that develops international food standards, including MRLs.