Japan, South Korea and Taiwan all resumed placing orders for Northwest wheat after tests failed to turn up any that was genetically modified.
The Japanese government tested 1.2 million metric tons of U.S. wheat for GMO material without finding any, according to the trade group U.S. Wheat Associates.
"The customers came back before the harvest was really finished," Rowe said from his Portland office. "It didn't really interfere too much with the movement of wheat."
If there is any more genetically modified wheat growing, farmers won't know until spring.
Fields that grow wheat this winter will be sprayed with herbicides after harvest in the spring, so they can lie fallow for a year. Any wheat growing after it has been sprayed is likely to have been genetically modified to survive herbicides, which makes it easier to grow.
That's how the rogue strain was discovered. The farmer sent a sample to Oregon State University, where it was determined to be genetically modified. USDA confirmed the finding.
Though USDA says the grain is safe to eat, it has not been approved for growing in the U.S. Japan and Korea won't buy genetically modified wheat, so they stopped placing new orders, though shipments on existing contract were not stopped, Padget said.
Oregon farmers typically produce 50 million bushels of wheat in a year, said Rowe, and as much as 90 percent of that goes for export, primarily to Asia. Due to drought and frost issues, this year's harvest likely will be less, though the final numbers are not in, he said.
(One bushel of wheat equals 27 kilograms, or 60 pounds).