Three months ago I found that the U.S. uses 72 pesticides in agriculture that are banned in Europe. Accounting for more than a quarter of our pesticide use (over 320 million pounds per year)
It has been identified it as a reproductive toxin and its metabolites are expected to leach into groundwater
The U.S. uses more than 2 million pounds a year, mostly on wheat, corn and rice
Diquat has also been banned
Europe found unacceptable risks to bystanders and residents near where spraying occurs. Also a high risk to birds.
We use 300,000 pounds per year on fruits and veggies
Pymetrozine, recently banned in the EU for potential to contaminate groundwater and possible endocrine effects, is used mostly in FL, CA central valley and eastern WA on fruits and veggies in the U.S.
Last but not least, #chlorpyrifos may be the next casualty of the EU's war on dangerous pesticides. @EFSA_EU found it “does not meet the criteria” for approval.
In 2016, chlorpyrifos almost became one of the few pesticides banned in the U.S. and approved in the EU
But the Trump administration was so beholden to the pesticide industry that it reversed the planned ban.
Now we will once again have to follow the EU when it comes to protecting humans and the environment from the neurotoxic chlorpyrifos.
Many states are leading the way
While the EU has less land dedicated to agriculture than China, its export value of agricultural products is higher than the USA, China and Brazil combined.
The only ones benefiting from the use of these dangerous pesticides in the U.S. is the chemical industry
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The House Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy just released an investigation into seresto that found the flea collar should be taken off the market
A lot of new info in the report that had not been reported on previously
Here’s the report. It takes you through the approval of the collar in 2012 to the present. It provides examples of EPA failing to stand up to an industry that feels so entitled, that even the mention of commonsense restrictions was met with derision
As someone who is not opposed to genetic engineering but often at odds with how it is currently used in agriculture, I think we need more nuanced looks at GMOs in the media.
In academia I genetically engineered non-pathogenic bacterial cells and human cells to better understand the genetic basis of chronic diseases like cancer. I understand how genetic engineering works and the promises it can hold, particularly in the biomedical field
It’s easy to find some small company that genuinely wants to better people’s nutrition through genetic engineering and use that as a poster child
But it's a disservice to not adequately explain “what is” instead of “what could be” in some fairytale world that does not exist
We’re in the middle of a public health crisis and the pesticide industry and USDA are working to weaken international guidance aimed at making sure lifesaving medicines still work in the future
How and why is the pesticide industry doing this? 👇
For starters, medically important antibiotics are used as pesticides to kill bacteria on crops. Fungicides, similar to antifungals used in humans, are also widely used as pesticides
The more you use them, the more likely it is that fungi or bacteria will become resistant
Increasingly, there is worry that the overuse of these medicines as pesticides can lead to antibiotic and antifungal resistance in human pathogens and cause these medicines to not work when our lives depend on it
There's a small bright spot in EPA’s atrazine re-approval
Thanks to a legal settlement by conservation groups, atrazine will be prohibited in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the North Mariana Islands
This is an incredible conservation win as these places are biodiversity hotspots. Use of atrazine will also be prohibited along roadsides, in forests and on X-mas trees in the continental U.S.
The harm from atrazine’s re-approval is immeasurable, but these areas will be spared
This is being billed by the EPA and industry as “voluntary” measures they are taking, but there is nothing voluntary about this.
They had to do this as the absolute minimum step of beginning to come into compliance with the Endangered Species Act.
The ecological risk assessment for #chlorpyrifos was released today. The career scientists at EPA found that invertebrates could be exposed to more than 8,600-fold more than the level known to harm them
I need to do something to stop stewing over the supreme court, so I'm just going to tell the story of how the endocrine disrupting pesticide #atrazine went from being on its last leg in the U.S. to being rubberstamped for the foreseeable future
No one is going to tell this story because there are a thousand other scandals happening right now and because it's super wonky.
Unlike a lot of the big environmental rollbacks that will hopefully be reversed after the election, this will likely fall under the radar
In 2016, under the Obama admin., EPA put out a devastating eco risk assessment of atrazine basically saying that its use has to be scaled back dramatically or there will be serious environmental consequences
In 50 years, this was the most hard-lined position EPA had taken