June
9, 2010
For
Immediate Release
Contacts:
Karl Tupper, PANNA, 415-981-6205, ext 314
Kristin Schafer, PANNA, 408-836-8189 (cell)
End
game for endosulfan
Environmental
health and farmworker groups celebrate U.S.
phaseout
of persistent pesticide
Today
Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) and partners around the world
are rejoicing over U.S. EPA’s announcement of the end of endosulfan, an
antiquated, highly toxic insecticide. The pesticide has been linked to autism,
birth defects, and delayed puberty in humans.
“This decision is a long overdue victory for the farmworkers who have worked
with this poison, the families that live near fields where it’s sprayed, and
the Indigenous communities in the Arctic who are exposed to it in their traditional foods,” said Karl Tupper, Staff
Scientist with PANNA. “Our work has finally paid off.”
PANNA
and allies have campaigned for a ban on endosulfan for years, collecting tens
of thousands of signatures on petitions to EPA, filing legal petitions,
submitting detailed comment letters, and challenging in federal court the
agency’s 2002 decision to reregister endosulfan.
Citing
concerns over human health and environmental degradation, EPA is negotiating an
agreement from its manufacturer, Makhteshim Agan North America, to voluntary
remove endosulfan products from the market.
“The
end of endosulfan cannot come soon enough for farmworkers,” says Jeannie
Economos, Pesticide Safety and Environmental Health Project Coordinator with
the Farmworker Association of Florida. “The health of farmworkers should have
raised red flags on the impacts of this pesticide many years ago. Soil and
water studies in and around the Everglades indicate that endosulfan is also of serious
concern to wildlife.”
Today’s
announcement is expected to have reverberations outside the U.S. as well. Already
banned in more than 60 countries around the world, including Thailand, Sri Lanka,
several African countries and all 27 members of European Union, a global ban on
endosulfan is currently being pursued under the Stockholm Convention on
Persistent Organic Pollutants, a UN treaty.
“The U.S. EPA is taking the lead in the right direction with its decision to phase out
endosulfan,” says Sarojeni V. Rengam of Pesticide Action Network Asia and the
Pacific. “We hope this decision will increase momentum towards a worldwide ban
that is effectively implemented by governments. The unhealthy legacy of this
acutely toxic chemical has been felt for decades by farmers and rural
communities in Asia and throughout the world. It is time for endosulfan to go.”
Pamela
Miller, Executive Director of Alaska Community Action on Toxics, agrees. “Endosulfan
has become one of the most ubiquitous organochlorine pesticides in the Arctic,
contaminating the traditional foods of Arctic Indigenous peoples, including
fish, seabird eggs, and marine mammals. This is a serious public health and
human rights issue. Unless it is phased out globally, levels are likely to
increase with climate warming in the Arctic. We hope that the U.S. phase out
will help advance a global ban.”
The
Stockholm Convention outlaws toxic chemicals that—like PCBs and DDT—persist in
the environment, bioaccumulate in food chains, and are transported across
international boundaries on the wind and in ocean currents. India and China
have been the most vocal opponents to adding endosulfan to the treaty, and have
pointed to its continued use in the U.S. as evidence that it must not be harmful.
According
to Tupper, who participates in the Convention’s negotiations, “Today’s
announcement takes away one the most powerful talking points of those few countries
that are determined to stop a global ban.”
Jayakumar
Chelaton, Director of the Indian NGO Thanal, said, “We expect that India will
be encouraged to act after hearing the decisions of the U.S. EPA to
protect health and the environment, since Indian law makers have been referring
to U.S. provisions when framing the Indian law. This is now the opportunity
for all to stay ahead in saving the world and making it toxic free. "
Available
for interviews:
Karl
Tupper, Staff Scientist, Pesticide Action Network North America. (415) 981-6205,
ext 314, karl@panna.org
Pamela
Miller, Executive Director, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, (907) 222-7714,
pkmiller@akaction.net
Jeanne
Economos, Pesticide Safety and Environmental Health Project Coordinator, Farmworker
Association of Florida, (407) 886-5151, farmworkerassoc@aol.com
Resources:
PANNA
resource page on endosulfan:
http://www.panna.org/campaigns/endosulfan
EPA
information on endosulfan cancellation: http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/reregistration/endosulfan/endosulfan-cancl-fs.html

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