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Imprelis, A Recently Approved Herbicide Causing Tree Deaths

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/15/science/earth/15herbicide.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha2

New Herbicide Suspected in Tree Deaths
By JIM ROBBINS, New York Times

Published: July 14, 2011

A recently approved herbicide called Imprelis, widely used by landscapers because it was thought to be environmentally friendly, has emerged as the leading suspect in the deaths of thousands of Norway spruces, eastern white pines and other trees on lawns and golf courses across the country.

Manufactured by DuPont and conditionally approved for sale last October by the federal Environmental Protection Agency, Imprelis is used for killing broadleaf weeds like dandelion and clover and is sold to lawn care professionals only. Reports of dying trees started surfacing around Memorial Day, prompting an inquiry by DuPont scientists.

“We are investigating the reports of these unfavorable tree symptoms,” said Kate Childress, a spokeswoman for DuPont. “Until this investigation is complete, it’s difficult to say what variables contributed to the symptoms.”

DuPont continues to sell the product, which is registered for use in all states except California and New York. The company said that there were many places where the product had been used without damaging trees.

The E.P.A. has begun gathering information on the deaths from state officials and DuPont as well as through its own investigators. “E.P.A. is taking this very seriously,” the agency said in a statement.

In a June 17 letter to its landscape customers, Michael McDermott, a DuPont products official, seemed to put the onus for the tree deaths on workers applying Imprelis. He wrote that customers with affected trees might not have mixed the herbicide properly or might have combined it with other herbicides. DuPont officials have also suggested that the trees may come back, and have asked landscapers to leave them in the ground.

Mr. McDermott instructed customers in the letter not to apply the herbicide near Norway spruce or white pine, or places where the product might drift toward such trees or run off toward their roots.

For some landscapers, the die-off has been catastrophic. “It’s been devastating,” said Matt Coats, service manager for Underwood Nursery in Adrian, Mich. “We’ve made 1,000 applications and had 350 complaints of dead trees, and it’s climbing. I’ve done nothing for the last three weeks but deal with angry customers.”

“We’re seeing some trees doing O.K., with just the tips getting brown, and others are completely dead and it looks like someone took a flamethrower to them,” he said.

So far, the herbicide seems to affect trees with shallow root systems, including willows, poplars and conifers, he said.

Underwood Nursery is replacing the trees, which its liability insurance covers, but faces a $500 deductible for each incident. “It’s already cost us $150,000,” Mr. Coats said. Some landscapers are finding that their insurance does not cover the tree deaths at all.

The chemical name of the product is aminocyclopyrachlor, one of a new class of herbicides that has been viewed as safer than earlier weed killers.

DuPont, landscapers and others had high hopes for the product. It has low toxicity to mammals, works at low concentrations and can kill weeds that other herbicides have trouble vanquishing, like ground ivy, henbit and wild violets. It works on the weeds’ roots as well as their leaves.

No firm estimate exists on the extent of the tree die-off. But Bert Cregg, an associate professor of horticulture and forestry and an extension specialist with Michigan State University who has fielded many calls from landscapers and inspected affected trees, said the problem existed across the country. Many extension services have issued warnings, Dr. Cregg said.

“This is going to be a large-scale problem, affecting hundreds of thousands of trees, if not more,” he said. Imprelis is used on athletic fields and cemeteries as well as on private lawns and golf courses, he noted.

While landscapers are replacing some of the trees, they cannot replace large mature ones, meaning that some homeowners have lost some of their biggest and oldest trees.

“I’m very concerned,” said Amy Frankmann, executive director of the Michigan Nursery and Landscape Association, who has heard from many members and who says the disaster could threaten the livelihoods of landscapers whose insurance will not cover the cost. “Absolutely. One member is looking at having to replace a thousand trees.”

Mark Utendorf, owner of Emerald Lawn Care in Arlington, Heights, Ill., has seen dozens of customers’ trees turn brown. “It’s unfortunate, because the product works exceedingly well on turf,” he said.

“It kills creeping Charlie, and that’s something that’s very hard to kill,” Mr. Utendorf said, referring to a type of ivy that has been known to take over lawns.

He noted that the product had been viewed as part of a more environmentally safe lawn industry and a game changer. “I hope people will give DuPont a chance to make this product work,” Mr. Utendorf said, adding that he was still using it, though very carefully and not where there were conifers.

Imprelis went through about 400 trials, including tests on conifers, and performed without problems, according to experts at DuPont and at the E.P.A. The agency reviewed the herbicide for 23 months before granting its conditional approval, meaning that all of the safety data was not yet in but the agency judged Imprelis to be a good product.

Even if the product is eventually proved to be a tree killer, it is considered unlikely that the E.P.A. will ban it, experts said. The agency would probably work with DuPont to change the herbicide’s labeling or to mandate larger buffer zones, they added.

Imprelis is not approved for use in New York and California because both states have separate review procedures for such products. New York State officials say they have told DuPont that it has detected two problems: the herbicide does not bind with soil, and it leaches into groundwater. The state has told DuPont it will therefore not allow Imprelis to be sold unless the company provides evidence to the contrary.

California officials say they are still reviewing the product.

The United States Composting Council, meanwhile, warned in May that grass clippings from lawns treated with Imprelis should not be composted because the chemical survives the process and can kill flowers and vegetables that are treated with the compost. That warning is included on the Imprelis product label.

Dr. Cregg, the extension service specialist at Michigan State University, said it was possible that many of the affected trees could recover if left in place for a year to a few years, even if damage appeared severe, because he had seen such a turnaround after similar damage to trees. “A lot of it comes down to the homeowner’s tolerance,” he said. “How long can they stand to look at this thing in the yard?”

Janet and Robert DaPrato of Columbus, Ohio, are facing that question as they gaze upon a 10-foot-high Norway spruce that started withering a month after a worker applied Imprelis in their yard. Then the needles fell off.

“The tree looks pretty well dead,” Mr. DaPrato said.

Need we mention how this relates to the possible fiasco of NSTAR using herbicides on public and private property around wells and homes? Contact NSTAR, Governor Patrick, your legislators, write the papers…please don’t just sit and wait for the OOOOOPS!

Municipal Organic Turf Management Training Project — Registration Deadline

GreenCAPE (GreenCAPE.org) has initiated a Cape-wide Municipal Natural Land Management Training Program. The training will outline standards of practice that could be easily implemented by municipalities to protect residents, the Cape’s water supplies, and eventually save money as this program has done in the town of Marblehead, MA.

Several weeks ago an invitation was sent to all town officials and DPWs on Cape Cod offering this opportunity to their grounds keepers. GreenCAPE is sponsoring the day-long workshop which features Chip Osborne, a nationally recognized lawn/turf/athletic field management specialist to provide practical training to Cape municipal grounds keepers at no cost to the towns. All municipal ground keepers and volunteers that maintain town landscapes are encouraged to attend whether they maintain school grounds, cemeteries, parks, town libraries, town athletic fields—anything green that grows on town property.

The workshop on natural lawn/turf management will focus not on products, but on the establishment of healthy soil and dense turf that naturally resists insects, weeds and disease. In addition to reducing chemical pesticide impacts to public health and the environment, this natural approach reduces nitrogen and phosphorus loading to waterways, conserves valuable water resources, protects our marine life and related tourist economy.

Natural Turf Management: A Systems Approach

Wednesday, November 9th, 8:00-3:00
Barnstable Town Hall–Hearing Room (2nd flr.)
367 Main Street
Hyannis, MA (behind the Post Office)

 
Pre-Registration Required (Deadline NOV 3)
MA Pesticide, MCLP, & NOFA Credits Pending

Click here to register now.
Click here to download workshop schedule.

Please see the attached program description and register all members of your grounds staff or subcontractors your town customarily uses to maintain town properties by the registration deadline –Nov 3rd. MA Pesticide, MCLP, and NOFA credits pending. ($25 for CEUs).

Click here to register now.
Click here to download workshop schedule.

Sandra Steingraber’s “Living Downstream” Film — Fall Showings Announced

Sandra Steingraber’s first book, “Living Downstream: An Ecologist’s Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment” was made in to a film last year and GreenCAPE has been screening it in towns across the Cape this year.

Upcoming film showing dates are:

• October 26 10 am – 12 noon, Church of the Holy Spirit, 204 Monument Rd, Orleans Download CHS Flyer Please call to reserve a seat — 508-362-5927.
• November 16 1:30-3:30 pm Barnstable Senior Center, 825 Falmouth Rd. (Route 28, next to the Intermediate School), Hyannis Download BSC Flyer

Recently, Steingraber was named as a recipient of the Heinz Award, a $100,000 cash prize which she is donating to an environmental group. Read her comments on that in the following link: www.alternet.org/water/152427/why_i%27m_donating_my_heinz_award_money_to_the_fight_against_fracking

Cape Cod for a Truly Green Nstar — August Update

A press conference was held on the banks of the Cape Cod Canal on Wednesday, August 17th. The speakers, including Senator Dan Wolf, were right on target, telling NSTAR that chemicals have no place on the Cape. The huge hand made banners and yellow caution tape drew a physical line in the sand to the utility company which previously sprayed on the cape without knowing the location of drinking water wells and other sensitive areas.

Toxics Action and Sylvia Broude led the charge
Use this page to TAKE ACTION.

Cape Cod Canal rally decries NStar spray tactics Cape Cod Times, August 18, 2011, p. A3.

Cape Cod Today Blog by Gerald RogovinCape Group Continues to Battle NSTAR on Herbicide Spraying is a very detailed description of events, to which you can add comments.

Be informed. Then make your voice heard.–Mechanical clearing is already part of the vegetation management plan, why add chemicals? The plan states that it’s safer for the workers. (!) Read the vegetation management plan and the herbicide labels on the GreenCAPE website www.greencape.org/nstar_actions.html

Every day brings us closer to the end of the “moratorium.”

Join us at the press conference, Wednesday, Aug 17th at 10:45 am

Please forward this action alert to your lists and post to your pages and blogs-let’s get a load of people together and end this NSTAR herbicide spray plan forever. Friends, family–EVERYONE who wants clean air, soil, and water for Cape Cod is invited to stand with us and Senator Wolf at the Canal!

Let’s draw a no-spray line at the Cape Cod Canal that separates the mainland from the Cape and its precious and vulnerable aquifer.

Cape Cod is a national treasure, known for its rare beauty and pristine environment. Unfortunately, the Cape also has a history of contamination and some of the highest cancer rates in the country. Over the last several years, a new threat emerged on Cape Cod – NSTAR, the largest Massachusetts electric utility, has sprayed toxic pesticides along 150 miles of power lines in more than 14 Cape Cod towns and intends to spray again in 2012. The pesticides they use have been linked to cancer and kidney damage and can easily leech into drinking water, polluting Cape Cod’s only water source.

For decades, NSTAR controlled vegetation effectively through cutting and mowing, and never used toxic pesticides. So we’re gathering again this August to urge NSTAR yet again to abandon their pesticide plans and return to a strict no-spray policy on Cape Cod.

Take action today to help protect Cape Cod’s drinking water and stop NSTAR’s pesticide plan.

Attend our press event and rally, Wednesday August 17th at 10:45AM

In front of the Cape Cod Canal Visitor Center in Sandwich on 60 Ed Moffitt Dr. (Next to Joe’s Lobster Mart) . For more detailed directions see below or : http://www.nae.usace.army.mil/recreati/ccc/recreation/viscentdir.htm.

Yes, its summer and you have guests, etc. We ALL do –but NSTAR is already making their plans for 2012 AND they will be merging with a much larger company very soon giving us less leverage to deal. If you volunteer a smidgeon of your time this week-about a half an hour- we have a much better chance of changing this scenario.

Community leaders and elected officials will be speaking out against NSTAR’s plans to spray pesticides along power lines on Cape Cod. Demonstrate your support for this to NSTAR and the media and help protect our drinking water from toxic herbicides.
This is your chance to show your support for the no-spray policy to your elected officials, NSTAR, and the press. NUMBERS ARE KEY IF THIS IS TO WORK! Please be there at 10:45 AM!

Only with your help-we can stop the NSTAR spraying. Please join us Wednesday!

Directions to the Cape Cod Canal Visitor Center

We are located on along the Cape-side of the Canal at 60 Ed Moffitt Drive in Sandwich, MA near the Sandwich Marina and the US Coast Guard Station. 508-833-9678.

From Off-Cape
• Travel over the Sagamore Bridge onto Cape Cod. Take the first exit – Exit 1C
• The off-ramp will lead you to a set of lights. Turn RIGHT at the lights taking Rte 6A towards Sandwich.
• Drive under the Sagamore Bridge and continue for 1.1 miles.
• You will pass the ‘Entering Sandwich’ sign
• Continue .2 miles. Turn LEFT onto Tupper Road (you will see Rte 130 on your right)
• Continue for .8 mile and turn left onto Freezer Road. (There will be a large brown Cape Cod Canal sign and a dive shop on the corner)
• Continue for .1 mile and take your first RIGHT onto Ed. Moffitt Drive. • Follow Ed Moffitt Drive for .4 mile around the Marina. Continue on Ed Moffitt by turning RIGHT after the Coast Guard Station (when you see the “Bulkhead Recreation Area” sign.)
• Take Ed Moffitt Drive to the end. You will see a parking lot and the Visitor Center.
• We are located next to Joe’s Lobster Mart and across from Seafood Sam’s.
• Bus parking is available if needed.

From Falmouth and Bourne (Route 28/MacArthur Blvd. area)
• Take 28 north to the Bourne Bridge rotary
• Exit the rotary onto Sandwich Road (just before IHOP)
• Continue on Sandwich Road, traveling along the south side of the Canal, for approximately 3 miles
• Drive under the Sagamore Bridge and continue for 1.1 miles.
• You will pass the ‘Entering Sandwich’ sign
• Continue .2 miles. Turn LEFT onto Tupper Road (you will see Rte 130 on your right)
• Continue for .8 mile and turn left onto Freezer Road. (There will be a large brown Cape Cod Canal sign and a dive shop on the corner)
• Continue for .1 mile and take your first RIGHT onto Ed. Moffitt Drive.
• Follow Ed Moffitt Drive for .4 mile around the Marina. Continue on Ed Moffitt by turning RIGHT after the Coast Guard Station (when you see the “Bulkhead Recreation Area” sign.)
• Take Ed Moffitt Drive to the end. You will see a parking lot and the Visitor Center.
• We are located next to Joe’s Lobster Mart and across from Seafood Sam’s.
• Bus parking is available if needed.

From the Rest of Cape Cod
• Take Route 6 to exit 2.
• Turn LEFT following Route 130 North towards Sandwich Center.
• At Sandwich Center fork LEFT to continue on Rte 130 North
• Take an immediate RIGHT onto Tupper Road. (Sandwich Glass Museum on corner)
• At the traffic lights, cross over Route 6A.
• Take first RIGHT onto Town Neck Road.
• Take second LEFT onto Coast Guard Road.
• Turn RIGHT at end onto Ed Moffitt Drive to enter the Visitor Center parking lot.
• We are located next to Joe’s Lobster Mart and across from Seafood Sam’s.
• Bus parking is available if needed.

Weeds Are Cleared in Los Angeles Using Goats, Not Chemicals

Money Savers and Crowd Pleasers with Cloven Hoofs

The New York Times had an article today called Money Savers and Crowd Pleasers with Cloven Hoofs about using goats to clear weeds in a very inaccessible place in Los Angeles. Go to the link to see the pictures. We are not saying that goats are THE answer to defoliating, but it’s good to know that so many people are thinking outside of the box with good results. It’s too bad that Nstar seems to be stuck on dangerous chemical spraying above our water supply. It’s not all about the money sometimes, it should be what’s best for the people who have to live with it. We are your customers too, Nstar!

Money Savers and Crowd Pleasers With Cloven Hooves
By JENNIFER MEDINA
Published: August 9, 2011

LOS ANGELES — With brown, dusty grass lining the hillside, this scrubby patch of land in the middle of downtown is not that much to look at.

The goats have become popular attractions at Angel’s Knoll. This is the fourth year they are being used to clear brush there.

But in the span of a few days, the weeds on the patch along South Hill Street has gone from a few feet tall to mere inches — thanks to a herd of goats that gobble up to 15 pounds of grass and such a day and have become something of a sightseeing attraction in the downtown bustle.

Using goats to clear roadsides and public lands of brush and weeds is hardly new, but usually they tend to work far from a downtown. In Southern California, where wildfires are a constant threat, municipal governments have increasingly moved to hiring goats rather than relying on weed whackers to clear dry land, saying it saves money and is better for the environment.

“This comes natural to them; they know it and love it,” said Johnny Gonzales, the herd manager for Environmental Land Management, the company hired to deploy the goats. “We are just using what nature gave them.”

Environmental Land Management charges an average of $1,250 an acre for its goat service.

By now, the fourth year that the goats have been used to clear the steep hillside known as Angel’s Knoll, they have become a summer tradition. The herd of mostly female South African Boer goats — roughly 60 adults and 60 kids — came from San Diego, and each day, the throngs of onlookers — bankers and lawyers, tourists and families — have gathered to gawk at the brown and white and spotted creatures. The goats seem unperturbed by the nearby tram, Angels Flight, that carries people up the hill, or the constant photo snapping and the eager hands that reach out to pet them.

These goats, Mr. Gonzales said, are adept at dealing with noise and people. (Don’t go looking for urban grass-fed goat meat or cheese from these animals; Mr. Gonzales said he had no plans to market their products for food. Besides, he added, the meat would probably not be tender anyway.)

The youngest members of the herd are trained by visiting the sites with their mothers. Every once in a while, one of the smallest kids slips through an opening in the fence around Angel’s Knoll. But they then tend to just stand there, gazing around at the people, until one of the 24-hour-a-day attendants shoos them back to where they belong.

“If I’ve got goats wandering where they’re not supposed to be, that’s the end of me,” Mr. Gonzales said.

Juan Rodarte, 41, recently brought his family of eight for lunch nearby and stopped by the Angels Flight funicular for a joy ride, as many families do this time of year. When he pointed out the goats, his daughters giggled with delight. Though the teenagers grew bored, the younger Rodartes remained captivated, giving the animals their best baa imitations.

Kimberly, 9, could not remember if she had ever seen a goat before. “In the zoo,” her father told her. But she protested, ‘You never take us to the zoo.”

“This is the first time they aren’t just on TV,” Kimberly said.

Join us on the Green Carpet for The Toxies!

The Cape Cod TOXIE Awards

for icky “bad actor”* chemicals


Join Us on the Green Carpet

July 30, 2011—6:30 PM

Cape Cod Chat House

593 Route 6A, Dennis Village

Pre-Award Ceremony Reception-6:00 PM

Forget the Oscars, The Toxies Are Much More Exciting
www.treehugger.com/files/2010/03/toxies-more-exciting-than-oscars.php

Here’s Your Chance to Pick Your Poison!
(Will NSTAR Chemicals Win Any Awards???)
YOU could be having a toxic relationship​ with one of these bad actor chemicals–and not even know it!

Join GreenCAPE on July 30th to Meet and Greet Outstanding Chemical Superstars like Lead, BPA, and (gasp) Perchlorate!

The TOXIES AWARD CEREMONY will be held at the

Cape Cod Chat House

593 Rte 6A, Dennis Village

Sat. July 30, 2011 at 6:30 P.M.

Pre-award ceremony reception at 6:00 PM features libations created just for the occasion:

The TOXIN (consume at your peril….) and The ANTITOXIN(consume with gusto!)

TOXIE Awards (supplied by “The Industry”) will be given to Bad Actor
Chemicals*—(aka chemicals behaving badly!)- chemicals and compounds found in
everyday products, air, soil, water or food that compromise our health and
the Cape environment.

Background: There are over 80,000 synthetic chemicals currently registered for use in the United States. Many of those chemicals have not been adequately tested for their effects on the human body and some have known links to cancer, birth defects and other health-related problems. Federal and State regulations have not kept pace with recent scientific
discoveries and YOUR health is a risk. GreenCAPE is taking a tongue-in-cheek approach to raise awareness
about chemical effects on health and the environment on Cape Cod by hosting the first annual Green Carpet event—the Cape Cod TOXIES!
*“Bad Actor” chemicals commonly found on Cape Cod will be highlighted during the award ceremony.  In order to be eligible to “win”, the chemicals have to have negatively impacted the health of Cape Codders by accumulating in the body, causing cancer, nerve damage, asthma, birth defects or miscarriages; by being poisonous, by polluting air, soil,  or water, or
affecting wild and not-so-wild life.

The Cape Cod TOXIES Award Ceremony is co-sponsored by the Unitarian Church
of Barnstable Social Justice Committee and graciously hosted by the folks at the Cape Cod Chat House –
www.CapeCodChatHouse.com.

www.GreenCAPE.org

Download a flyer and help us publicize this fun night: toxie_awards_flyer

Roundup: Birth Defects Caused By World’s Top-Selling Weedkiller, Scientists Say.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/24/roundup-scientists-birth-defects_n_883578.html

WASHINGTON — The chemical at the heart of the planet’s most widely used herbicide — Roundup weedkiller, used in farms and gardens across the U.S. — is coming under more intense scrutiny following the release of a new report calling for a heightened regulatory response around its use.

Critics have argued for decades that glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup and other herbicides used around the globe, poses a serious threat to public health. Industry regulators, however, appear to have consistently overlooked their concerns.

A comprehensive review of existing data released this month by Earth Open Source, an organization that uses open-source collaboration to advance sustainable food production, suggests that industry regulators in Europe have known for years that glyphosate, originally introduced by American agricultural biotechnology giant Monsanto in 1976, causes birth defects in the embryos of laboratory animals.

Founded in 2009, Earth Open Source is a non-profit organisation incorporated in the U.K. but international in scope. Its three directors, specializing in business, technology and genetic engineering, work pro-bono along with a handful of young volunteers. Partnering with half a dozen international scientists and researchers, the group drew its conclusions in part from studies conducted in a number of locations, including Argentina, Brazil, France and the United States.

Earth Open Source’s study is only the latest report to question the safety of glyphosate, which is the top-ranked herbicide used in the United States. Exact figures are hard to come by because the U.S. Department of Agriculture stopped updating its pesticide use database in 2008. The EPA estimates that the agricultural market used 180 to 185 million pounds of glyphosate between 2006 and 2007, while the non-agricultural market used 8 to 11 million pounds between 2005 and 2007, according to its Pesticide Industry Sales & Usage Report for 2006-2007 published in February, 2011.

The Earth Open Source study also reports that by 1993 the herbicide industry, including Monsanto, knew that visceral anomalies such as dilation of the heart could occur in rabbits at low and medium-sized doses. The report further suggests that since 2002, regulators with the European Commission have known that glyphosate causes developmental malformations in lab animals.

Even so, the commission’s health and consumer division published a final review report of glyphosate in 2002 that approved its use in Europe for the next 10 years.

As recently as last year, the German Federal Office for Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BLV), a government agency conducting a review of glyphosate, told the European Commission that there was no evidence the compound causes birth defects, according to the report.

The agency reached that conclusion despite almost half a dozen industry studies that found glyphosate produced fetal malformations in lab animals, as well as an independent study from 2007 that found that Roundup induces adverse reproductive effects in the male offspring of a certain kind of rat.

German regulators declined to respond in detail for this story because they say they only learned of the Earth Open Source report last week. The regulators emphasized that their findings were based on public research and literature.

Although the European Commission originally planned to review glyphosate in 2012, it decided late last year not to do so until 2015. And it won’t review the chemical under more stringent, up-to-date standards until 2030, according to the report.

The European Commission told HuffPost that it wouldn’t comment on whether it was already aware of studies demonstrating the toxicity of glyphosate in 2002. But it said the commission was aware of the Earth Open Source study and had discussed it with member states.

“Germany concluded that study does not change the current safety assessment of gylphosate,” a commission official told HuffPost in an email. “This view is shared by all other member states.”

John Fagan, a doctor of molecular and cell biology and biochemistry and one of the founders of Earth Open Source, acknowledged his group’s report offers no new laboratory research. Rather, he said the objective was for scientists to compile and evaluate the existing evidence and critique the regulatory response.

“We did not do the actual basic research ourselves,” said Fagan. “The purpose of this paper was to bring together and to critically evaluate all the evidence around the safety of glyphosate and we also considered how the regulators, particularly in Europe, have looked at that.”

For its part, Earth Open Source said that government approval of the ubiquitous herbicide has been rash and problematic.

“Our examination of the evidence leads us to the conclusion that the current approval of glyphosate and Roundup is deeply flawed and unreliable,” wrote the report’s authors. “What is more, we have learned from experts familiar with pesticide assessments and approvals that the case of glyphosate is not unusual.

“They say that the approvals of numerous pesticides rest on data and risk assessments that are just as scientifically flawed, if not more so,” the authors added. “This is all the more reason why the Commission must urgently review glyphosate and other pesticides according to the most rigorous and up-to-date standards.”

Monsanto spokeswoman Janice Person said in a statement that the Earth Open Source report presents no new findings.

“Based on our initial review, the Earth Open Source report does not appear to contain any new health or toxicological evidence regarding glyphosate,” Person said.

“Regulatory authorities and independent experts around the world agree that glyphosate does not cause adverse reproductive effects in adult animals or birth defects in offspring of these adults exposed to glyphosate,” she said, “even at doses far higher than relevant environmental or occupational exposures.”

While Roundup has been associated with deformities in a host of laboratory animals, its impact on humans remains unclear. One laboratory study done in France in 2005 found that Roundup and glyphosate caused the death of human placental cells. Another study, conducted in 2009, found that Roundup caused total cell death in human umbilical, embryonic and placental cells within 24 hours. Yet researchers have conducted few follow-up studies.

“Obviously there’s a limit to what’s appropriate in terms of testing poison on humans,” said Jeffrey Smith, executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology, which advocates against genetically modified food. “But if you look at the line of converging evidence, it points to a serious problem. And if you look at the animal feeding studies with genetically modified Roundup ready crops, there’s a consistent theme of reproductive disorders, which we don’t know the cause for because follow-up studies have not been done.”

“More independent research is needed to evaluate the toxicity of Roundup and glyphosate,” he added, “and the evidence that has already accumulated is sufficient to raise a red flag.”

Authorities have criticized Monsanto in the past for soft-pedaling Roundup. In 1996 New York State’s Attorney General sued Monsanto for describing Roundup as “environmentally friendly” and “safe as table salt.” Monsanto, while not admitting any wrongdoing, agreed to stop using the terms for promotional purposes and paid New York state $250,000 to settle the suit.

Regulators in the United States have said they are aware of the concerns surrounding glyphosate. The Environmental Protection Agency, which is required to reassess the safety and effectiveness all pesticides on a 15-year cycle through a process called registration review, is currently examining the compound.

“EPA initiated registration review of glyphosate in July 2009,” the EPA told HuffPost in a written statement. “EPA will determine if our previous assessments of this chemical need to be revised based on the results of this review. EPA issued a notice to the company [Monsanto] to submit human health and ecotoxicity data in September 2010.”

The EPA said it will also review a “wide range of information and data from other independent researchers” including Earth Open Source.

The agency’s Office of Pesticide Programs is in charge of the review and has set a deadline of 2015 for determining if registration modifications need to be made or if the herbicide should continue to be sold at all.

Though skirmishes over the regulation of glyphosate are playing out at agencies across the U.S. and around the world, Argentina is at the forefront of the battle.

THE ARGENTINE MODEL

The Earth Open Source report, “Roundup and birth defects: Is the public being kept in the dark?” comes years after Argentine scientists and residents targeted glyphosate, arguing that it caused health problems and environmental damage.

Farmers and others in Argentina use the weedkiller primarily on genetically modified Roundup Ready soy, which covers nearly 50 million acres, or half of the country’s cultivated land area. In 2009 farmers sprayed that acreage with an estimated 200 million liters of glyphosate.

The Argentine government helped pull the country out of a recession in the 1990s in part by promoting genetically modified soy. Though it was something of a miracle for poor farmers, several years after the first big harvests residents near where the soy cop grew began reporting health problems, including high rates of birth defects and cancers, as well as the losses of crops and livestock as the herbicide spray drifted across the countryside.

Such reports gained further traction after an Argentine government scientist, Andres Carrasco conducted a study, “Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Produce Teratogenic Effects on Vertebrates by Impairing Retinoic Acid Signaling” in 2009.

The study, published in the journal Chemical Research in Toxicology in 2010, found that glyphosate causes malformations in frog and chicken embryos at doses far lower than those used in agricultural spraying. It also found that malformations caused in frog and chicken embryos by Roundup and its active ingredient glyphosate were similar to human birth defects found in genetically modified soy-producing regions.

“The findings in the lab are compatible with malformations observed in humans exposed to glyphosate during pregnancy,” wrote Carrasco, director of the Laboratory of Molecular Embryology at the University of Buenos Aires. “I suspect the toxicity classification of glyphosate is too low.”

“In some cases this can be a powerful poison,” he concluded.

Argentina has not made any federal reforms based on this research and has not discussed the research publicly, Carrasco told HuffPost, except to mount a “close defense of Monsanto and it partners.”

The Ministry of Science and Technology has moved to distance the government from the study, telling media at the time the study was not commissioned by the government and had not been reviewed by scientific peers.

Ignacio Duelo, spokesman for the the Ministry of Science and Technology’s National Council for Scientific and Technical Research [CONICET], told HuffPost in an statement that while Carrasco is one of its researchers, CONICET has not vouched for or assessed his work.

Duelo said that the Ministry of Science is examining Carrasco’s report as part of a study of the possible harmful effects of the glyphosate. Officials, he added, are as yet unable to “reach a definitive conclusion on the effects of glyphosate on human health, though more studies are recommended, as more data is necessary.”

REGIONAL BANS

After Carrasco announced his findings in 2009, the Defense Ministry banned planting of genetically modified glyphosate-resistant soy on lands it rents to farmers, and a group of environmental lawyers petitioned the Supreme Court of Argentina to implement a national ban on the use of glyphosate, including Monsanto’s Roundup product. But the ban was never adopted.

“A ban, if approved, would mean we couldn’t do agriculture in Argentina,” said Guillermo Cal, executive director of CASAFE, Argentina’s association of fertilizer companies, in a statement at the time.

In March 2010, a regional court in Argentina’s Santa Fe province banned the spraying of glyphosate and other herbicides near populated areas. A month later, the provincial government of Chaco province issued a report on health statistics from La Leonesa. The report, which was carried in the leftist Argentinian newspaper Página 12, showed that from 2000 to 2009, following the expansion of genetically-modified soy and rice crops in the region, the childhood cancer rate tripled in La Leonesa and the rate of birth defects increased nearly fourfold over the entire province.

MORE QUESTIONS

Back in the United States, Don Huber, an emeritus professor of plant pathology at Purdue University, found that genetically-modified crops used in conjunction with Roundup contain a bacteria that may cause animal miscarriages.

After studying the bacteria, Huber wrote Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack in February warning that the “pathogen appears to significantly impact the health of plants, animals, and probably human beings.”

The bacteria is particularly prevalent in corn and soybean crops stricken by disease, according to Huber, who asked Vilsack to stop deregulating Roundup Ready crops. Critics such as Huber are particularly wary of those crops because scientists have genetically altered them to be immune to Roundup — and thus allow farmers to spray the herbicide liberally onto a field, killing weeds but allowing the crop itself to continue growing.

Monsanto is not the only company making glyphosate. China sells glyphosate to Argentina at a very low price, Carrasco said, and there are more than one hundred commercial formulations in the market. But Monsanto’s Roundup has the longest list of critics, in part because it dominates the market.

The growth in adoption of genetically modified crops has exploded since their introduction in 1996. According to Monsanto, an estimated 89 percent of domestic soybean crops were Roundup Ready in 2010, and as of 2010, there were 77.4 million acres of Roundup Ready soybeans planted, according to the Department of Agriculture.

In his letter to the Agriculture Department, Huber also commented on the herbicide, saying that the bacteria that he’s concerned about appears to be connected to use of glyphosate, the key ingredient in Roundup.

“It is well-documented that glyphosate promotes soil pathogens and is already implicated with the increase of more than 40 plant diseases; it dismantles plant defenses by chelating vital nutrients; and it reduces the bioavailability of nutrients in feed, which in turn can cause animal disorders,” he wrote.

Huber said the Agriculture Department wrote him in early May and that he has had several contacts with the agency since then. But there’s little evidence that government officials have any intention of conducting the “multi-agency investigation” Huber requested.

Part of the problem may be that the USDA oversees genetically modified crops while the EPA watches herbicides, creating a potential regulatory loophole for products like Roundup, which relies on both to complete the system. When queried, USDA officials emphasized that they do not regulate pesticides or herbicides and declined to comment publicly on Huber’s letter.

A spokesman eventually conceded their scientists do study glyphosate. “USDA’s Agricultural Research Service’s research with glyphosate began shortly after the discovery of its herbicidal activity in the mid 1970s,” said the USDA in a statement. “All of our research has been made public and much has gone through the traditional peer review process.”

While Huber acknowledged his research is far from conclusive, he said regulatory agencies must seek answers now. “There is much research that needs to be done yet,” he said. “But we can’t afford to wait the three to five years for peer-reviewed papers.”

While Huber’s claims have roiled the agricultural world and the blogosphere alike, he has fueled skeptics by refusing to make his research public or identify his fellow researchers, who he claims could suffer substantial professional backlash from academic employers who received research funding from the biotechnology industry.

At Purdue University, six of Huber’s former colleagues pointedly distanced themselves from his findings, encouraging crop producers and agribusiness personnel “to speak with University Extension personnel before making changes in crop production practices that are based on sensationalist claims.”

Since it first introduced the chemical to the world in the 1970s, Monsanto has netted billions on its best-selling herbicide, though the company has faced stiffer competition since its patent expired in 2000 and it is reportedly working to revamp its strategy.

In a lengthy email, Person, the Monsanto spokeswoman, responded to critics, suggesting that the economic and environmental benefits of Roundup were being overlooked:

The authors of the report create an account of glyphosate toxicity from a selected set of scientific studies, while they ignored much of the comprehensive data establishing the safety of the product. Regulatory agencies around the world have concluded that glyphosate is not a reproductive toxin or teratogen (cause of birth defects) based on in-depth review of the comprehensive data sets available.

Earth Open Source authors take issue with the decision by the European Commission to place higher priority on reviewing other pesticide ingredients first under the new EU regulations, citing again the flawed studies as the rationale. While glyphosate and all other pesticide ingredients will be reviewed, the Commission has decided that glyphosate appropriately falls in a category that doesn’t warrant immediate attention.

“The data was there but the regulators were glossing over it,” said John Fagan of Earth Open Source, “and as a result it was accepted in ways that we consider really questionable.”

CORNERING THE INDUSTRY?

Although the EPA has said it wants to evaluate more evidence of glyphosate’s human health risk as part of a registration review program, the agency is not doing any studies of its own and is instead relying on outside data — much of which comes from the agricultural chemicals industry it seeks to regulate.

“EPA ensures that each registered pesticide continues to meet the highest standards of safety to protect human health and the environment,” the agency told HuffPost in a statement. “These standards have become stricter over the years as our ability to evaluate the potential effects of pesticides has increased. The Agency placed glyphosphate into registration review. Registration review makes sure that as the ability to assess risks and as new information becomes available, the Agency carefully considers the new information to ensure pesticides do not pose risks of concern to people or the environment.”

Agribusiness giants, including Monsanto, Dow Chemical, Syngenta and BASF, will, as part of a 19-member task force, generate much of the data the EPA is seeking. But the EPA has emphasized that the task force is only “one of numerous varied third-party sources that EPA will rely on for use in its registration review.”

The EPA is hardly the only industry regulator that relies heavily on data supplied by the agrochemical industry itself.

“The regulation of pesticides has been significantly skewed towards the manufacturers interests where state-of-the-art testing is not done and adverse findings are typically distorted or denied,” said Jeffrey Smith, of the Institute for Responsible Technology. “The regulators tend to use the company data rather than independent sources, and the company data we have found to be inappropriately rigged to force the conclusion of safety.”

“We have documented time and time again scientists who have been fired, stripped of responsibilities, denied funding, threatened, gagged and transferred as a result of the pressure put on them by the biotech industry,” he added.

Such suppression has sometimes grown violent, Smith noted. Last August, when Carrasco and his team of researchers went to give a talk in La Leonesa they were intercepted by a mob of about a hundred people. The attack landed two people in the hospital and left Carrasco and a colleague cowering inside a locked car. Witnesses said the angry crowd had ties to powerful economic interests behind the local agro-industry and that police made little effort to interfere with the beating, according to the human rights group Amnesty International.

Fagan told HuffPost that among developmental biologists who are not beholden to the chemical industry or the biotechnology industry, there is strong recognition that Carrasco’s research is credible.

“For me as a scientist, one of the reasons I made the effort to do this research into the literature was to really satisfy the question myself as to where the reality of the situation lies,” he added. “Having thoroughly reviewed the literature on this, I feel very comfortable in standing behind the conclusions Professor Carrasco came to and the broader conclusions that we come to in our paper

“We can’t figure out how regulators could have come to the conclusions that they did if they were taking a balanced look at the science, even the science that was done by the chemical industry itself.”

New study: Common chemicals may affect breast development

Silent Spring Releases Study on Effects of Early Life Exposures to Common Chemicals
From Executive Director Julia G. Brody:
Dear Friends,

I am pleased to share with you the new articles Silent Spring Institute released today on early life exposures to common chemicals and effects on breast development, breast-feeding, and breast cancer risk. The review and a related editorial, published in the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Health Perspectives on June 22, bring together the work of over 60 biologists, epidemiologists, toxicologists, physicians, public health officials, and breast cancer advocates.

Studies reviewed by the scientists show that exposures to common chemicals, such as BPA and flame retardants, during critical windows of development—in the womb and during infancy and puberty—may lead to changes that cause problems later in life with breast-feeding and increase the risk of breast cancer. Exposures may also lead to enlarged breasts in boys and men.

The articles identify a major gap in chemicals safety testing, which currently does not assess how chemicals may affect breast development. The scientists, led by Ruthann Rudel, Director of Research, recommend that future chemicals testing by EPA, NIEHS and OECD look for these effects.

By studying how environmental chemicals influence breast development, scientists can help government, manufacturers, and consumers make better decisions about how chemicals are used. In the meantime, there are steps moms can take now to reduce their exposures.

You can find the articles, fact sheets, and news coverage on our website: www.silentspring.org/mammary-gland-review. I would love to hear what you think and encourage you to share this important news with your friends and family. We hope you’ll join the conversation about our study by taking a moment to tweet, email, comment on, and “like” it.

Thank you for the many ways you support our groundbreaking research to protect women’s health—it wouldn’t be possible without you.

Best wishes,
Julia G. Brody
Executive Director

Silent Spring Institute
29 Crafts Street
Newton, Massachusetts 02458
617.332.4288 info@silentspring.org

NSTAR Plans to Defoliate on Cape Cod with Glyphosate, a chemical in Roundup that causes birth defects.

Roundup Birth Defects: Regulators Knew World’s Best-Selling Herbicide Causes Problems, New Report Finds
Lucia Graves, lucia@huffingtonpost.com

WASHINGTON — Industry regulators have known for years that Roundup, the world’s best-selling herbicide produced by U.S. company Monsanto, causes birth defects, according to a new report released Tuesday.

The report, “Roundup and birth defects: Is the public being kept in the dark?” found regulators knew as long ago as 1980 that glyphosate, the chemical on which Roundup is based, can cause birth defects in laboratory animals.

But despite such warnings, and although the European Commission has known that glyphosate causes malformations since at least 2002, the information was not made public.

Instead regulators misled the public about glyphosate’s safety, according to the report, and as recently as last year, the German Federal Office for Consumer Protection and Food Safety, the German government body dealing with the glyphosate review, told the European Commission that there was no evidence glyphosate causes birth defects.

Published by Earth Open Source, an organization that uses open source collaboration to advance sustainable food production, the report comes months after researchers found that genetically-modified crops used in conjunction Roundup contain a pathogen that may cause animal miscarriages.

After observing the newly discovered organism back in February, Don Huber, an emeritus professor at Purdue University, wrote an open letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack requesting a moratorium on deregulating crops genetically altered to be immune to Roundup, which are commonly called Roundup Ready crops.

In the letter, Huber also commented on the herbicide itself, saying: “It is well-documented that glyphosate promotes soil pathogens and is already implicated with the increase of more than 40 plant diseases; it dismantles plant defenses by chelating vital nutrients; and it reduces the bioavailability of nutrients in feed, which in turn can cause animal disorders.”

Although glyphosate was originally due to be reviewed in 2012, the Commission decided late last year not to bring the review forward, instead delaying it until 2015. The chemical will not be reviewed under more stringent, up-to-date standards until 2030.

Our examination of the evidence leads us to the conclusion that the current approval of glyphosate and Roundup is deeply flawed and unreliable,” wrote the report authors in their conclusion.

“What is more, we have learned from experts familiar with pesticide assessments and approvals that the case of glyphosate is not unusual.

“They say that the approvals of numerous pesticides rest on data and risk assessments that are just as scientifically flawed, if not more so,” the authors added. “This is all the more reason why the Commission must urgently review glyphosate and other pesticides according to the most rigorous and up-to-date standards.”