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NOP Guía 5006

This 3-sentence summary provides the key details from the document: The document from the USDA National Organic Program establishes guidance for using heat processed animal manures in organic crop production by removing time restrictions if manures meet minimum time and temperature requirements for pathogen reduction. It adopts recommendations from the National Organic Standards Board to allow unrestricted use of processed manures that are treated for over an hour at over 150 degrees Fahrenheit and dried to under 12% moisture or through an equivalent heating and drying process. The policy aims to enhance soil quality through proper nutrient management while ensuring safety through sufficient pathogen reduction in processed animal manures.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views3 pages

NOP Guía 5006

This 3-sentence summary provides the key details from the document: The document from the USDA National Organic Program establishes guidance for using heat processed animal manures in organic crop production by removing time restrictions if manures meet minimum time and temperature requirements for pathogen reduction. It adopts recommendations from the National Organic Standards Board to allow unrestricted use of processed manures that are treated for over an hour at over 150 degrees Fahrenheit and dried to under 12% moisture or through an equivalent heating and drying process. The policy aims to enhance soil quality through proper nutrient management while ensuring safety through sufficient pathogen reduction in processed animal manures.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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United States Department of Agriculture 1400 Independence Avenue SW.

NOP 5006
Agricultural Marketing Service Room 2646-South Building Effective Date: July 22, 2011
National Organic Program Washington, DC 20250 Page 1 of 3

Guidance
Processed Animal Manures in Organic Crop Production
Links Update: August 31, 2018

1. Purpose

This guidance explains the policy for the use of heat processed animal manures in crop production
operations certified as organic under the National Organic Program (NOP). This policy does not
supersede requirements of other Federal and State laws and regulations. However, written procedures
and records prepared by producers to meet NOP requirements may be the same as those prepared to
meet other regulatory requirements.

2. Scope

This guidance applies to all organic crop producers. This guidance does not apply to compost teas or
other products that may contain raw or composted manure.

3. Background

The NOP regulations require that uncomposted animal manures be applied at least 90 days prior to
harvest for crops whose edible portions do not come in contact with the soil and at least 120 days prior
to harvest of crops whose edible portions do come in contact with the soil. However, while the
regulations do not place the same restrictions on properly composted animal manures, the regulations do
not address heat processed animal manure products and their proper use in organic production. In the
past, the NOP had determined that processed manures, since they had not been composted according to
the NOP regulations, would fall in the category of uncomposted manure products for the purpose of
determining any restrictions which should be placed on their use in organic production.

At its September 2006 meeting, the National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) made a recommendation
regarding the use of processed animal manures in organic farming operations. In its recommendation,
the NOSB said that when animal manures are treated to a certain temperature over a given period of
time and then subsequently dried to a very low moisture level, the resulting product should fulfill the
pathogen reduction requirements imposed on compost in the NOP regulations. Therefore, the NOSB
recommended that the NOP issue guidance to the effect that processed manure products that meet
prescribed minimum time, temperature, and moisture requirements, or processed manure products that
have the same level of pathogen reduction as the prescribed process, should be allowed for use without
pre-harvest time restrictions.

In reviewing the NOSB’s recommendation, NOP officials met with manufacturers of processed manure
products and reviewed facilities used to produce these products. We also met with representatives of the
Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) to discuss current practices for the use of these products in
organic agricultural production. In addition, we reviewed and considered the Compost Task Force
Recommendation dated April 18, 2002.

Original Issue Date: 10/05/10 Authorized Distribution: Public


File Name: NOP 5006 Processed Animal Manures Rev02 08 31 18
United States Department of Agriculture 1400 Independence Avenue SW. NOP 5006
Agricultural Marketing Service Room 2646-South Building Effective Date: July 22, 2011
National Organic Program Washington, DC 20250 Page 2 of 3

Upon completion of our review of the recommendation, task force report, supporting documentation,
site reviews, and industry consultations, the NOP finds that it concurs with and accepts the NOSB’s
recommendation to remove the time restrictions previously imposed on processed manure products and
allow the unrestricted use of processed manure products when prepared in accordance with the
guidelines in this document. We noted, however, that the NOSB placed a more restrictive annotation on
the use of the processed manure, requiring that post-planting applications be applied below the surface
of the soil.

Our review of the task force report indicated that such restrictions may not be necessary, so we have not
incorporated that additional restriction into this operational policy.

We also noted that the NOSB recommendation specified a minimum temperature for the product to be
held for at least one hour without prescribing a minimum time for continuous flow processes. In
consulting with OMRI, we learned that achieving at least 165 degrees Centigrade in a continuous flow
process will achieve the necessary pathogen reduction, so we added that option to the criteria for an
acceptable process.

Finally, we noted that the NOSB recommended that processed manure test negative for the presence of
Salmonella and fecal coliform organisms. In considering this element of the recommendation, neither
the product manufacturers nor OMRI found this to be a practical requirement but agreed that a very low
level of pathogens could be reasonably accomplished with the prescribed process. Therefore, in
developing the policy for processed manures, we used the very low microbial counts consistent with
current industry practice, which could be used to indicate a sufficient level of pathogen reduction.

4. Policy

Processed manure may be used as a supplement to a soil building program without a specific interval
between application and harvest. As always, producers are expected to comply with all applicable
requirements of the NOP regulations with respect to soil quality, including ensuring the soil is enhanced
and maintained through proper stewardship.

Processed manure products must be treated so that all portions of the product, without causing
combustion, reach a minimum temperature of either 150o F (66o C) for at least one hour or 165o F
(74o C), and are dried to a maximum moisture level of 12%; or an equivalent heating and drying process
could be used. In determining the acceptability of an equivalent process, processed manure products
should not contain more than 1x103 (1,000) MPN (Most Probable Number) fecal coliform per gram of
processed manure sampled and not contain more than 3 MPN Salmonella per 4 gram sample of
processed manure.

5. References

NOP Regulations (as amended to date)


7 CFR § 205.203 Soil fertility and crop nutrient management practice standard.

Original Issue Date: 10/05/10 Authorized Distribution: Public


File Name: NOP 5006 Processed Animal Manures Rev02 08 31 18
United States Department of Agriculture 1400 Independence Avenue SW. NOP 5006
Agricultural Marketing Service Room 2646-South Building Effective Date: July 22, 2011
National Organic Program Washington, DC 20250 Page 3 of 3

NOSB Recommendations
April 2002, Crops Committee Compost Tea Task Force Final Report.

September 13, 2006. Crops Committee, Recommendation for Guidance for Use of Compost,
Vermicompost, Processed Manure, and Compost teas.

Approved on July 22, 2011

Original Issue Date: 10/05/10 Authorized Distribution: Public


File Name: NOP 5006 Processed Animal Manures Rev02 08 31 18

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