U.S. food crops, including rice, are held to very strict food safety and pesticide residue standards by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Imported crops and food products are held to various standards by their origin country and/or Codex Alimentarius (CODEX) which are often not be as stringent as U.S. standards. U.S. food safety standards should be enforced for domestic and imported food equally.

Rice is a grain, not a shape. That means that food and products using the word “rice” in their description and marketing must contain or be derived from rice or wild rice. Rice is defined as whole and broken kernels obtained from the species Oryza sativa L, wild rice are four species of grasses from the genus Zizania. should use the word rice in their name. Consumers are faced with many choices and advice when it comes to making food purchasing decisions, we believe that labels and terms that are misleading to consumers should not be used. 

We support a risk-based approach to establishing domestic and global standards for food safety and commerce and as an industry we strive to provide consumers assurance that U.S. rice and rice products meet or exceed the food safety standards in place by FDA and CODEX. 

Recent News

  • 2016-mo-rice-conference, group of men stand around USA Rice booth Large Turnout at Annual Missouri Rice Conference

    Feb 18, 2016

    More than one hundred rice farmers gathered here yesterday for the 2016 Missouri Rice Conference. This was the first time the conference has been held in Malden and the new location drew a lot of new faces, including many young farmers interested in growing rice. Full story
  • John Owen CME Seeks Rice Industry Response to Rough Rice Futures Contract Survey

    Feb 11, 2016

    The CME Group based here that oversees the trading of the Rough Rice Futures contract has published a short, two-question survey for rice industry members to complete by Monday, February 22. Full story
  • ga-killer-bees-on-tumblr-160201 EPA Update: What’s Best for Pests

    Feb 01, 2016

    Last month, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released their 2014 review of pesticide residue levels on produce, grain, salmon, and infant formula, and found that 99 percent of the samples had residue levels below the EPA limit. A total of 314 rice samples were taken and none contained residues over the legally established tolerance limit. View the full report here. Full story