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October 9, 2008
- Alert: Keep Endosulfan out of our food!
- Divers recover sunken endosulfan
- EPA halts tests-on-kids “temporarily”
- DDT malaria-spraying fails in Uganda
- Bees thrive in pesticide-free Paris
- Yoplait yogurt: “Pinkwashing” breast cancer
- Scottish millionaire fined for illegal pesticides
- Rising oil costs benefit organic produce
- Activists press candidates to protect human health
Action Alert – Tell EPA: “Keep endosulfan out of our food!”
In response to petitions submitted by PAN, Natural Resources Defense Council, United Farmworkers and other groups in February 2008, the U.S. EPA opened another public comment period on endosulfan, this time focused on revoking all food tolerances for the pesticide. PAN and allied groups are submitting new comments demanding that the EPA ensures that no residues of endosulfan are found in food sold in the U.S.—whether it is imported or domestically produced. Endosulfan, an antiquated insecticide, is one of the most commonly detected residues in our nation’s food supply. Because it does not easily break down, wind and water currents can carry it thousands of miles. The Arctic is a global sink for endosulfan, where it accumulates in the bodies of Indigenous people, plants and animals. Endosulfan also poses a danger to farmworkers and residents in rural communities near where it is sprayed. Earlier this month, PAN released a report documenting the presence of endosulfan in the air near a school in rural Florida. The comment period ends on October 20 — you can join the campaign by adding your name to PAN’s sign-on petition.
shareMORE – Read PAN’s report on Drift Catcher results in Florida | DiggThis<>
Divers recover sunken endosulfan cargo
Three months after the MV Princess of the Stars capsized in a storm off a Philippine island, the government finally began a $7.6-million, weeks-long process of removing 10,000 pounds of deadly pesticides trapped in the sunken ship. Danger from the toxic cargo has delayed retrieving the bodies of more than 500 passengers and crew. On October 6, the Manila Times reported that all 402 barrels of endosulfan, a neurotoxic organochlorine insecticide, had been safely recovered. Local residents and global environmental groups — including PAN, Greenpeace, and Health Care without Harm — were concerned that the 10 metric tons of endosulfan trapped in the sunken ship could put the entire marine ecosystem at risk. The watchdog group BANtay Endosulfan criticized the government for failing to disclose the disposal plan for the recovered chemicals. “There is simply no justification for endosulfan to remain in the Philippines,” BANtay Endosulfan leaders told the Philippine Daily Inquirer. Philippine activists insisted the recovered chemicals be returned to the manufacturers, and the Philippine Transportation Undersecretary has promised that the fiberboard drums containing endosulfan will be shipped back to Makteshim Agan, a chemical firm in Israel.
shareMORE – The health effects of endosulfan |
EPA halts pesticide-tests-on-kids “temporarily”
shareMORE – EPA Chief’s statement on cancellation of the CHEERS program |
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DDT malaria-spraying fails in Uganda
Spraying the insecticide DDT inside homes in malaria-ravaged Oyam and Apac districts has failed to halt the spread of the mosquito-borne disease. “Worryingly, public health data for Lango show that week-for-week, reported malaria cases are higher this year than they were in 2007,” Uganda’s Weekly Observer reports. Theories to explain the failure range from a longer rainy season to poor performance of underpaid applicators. “DDT spraying was supposed to have prompted an immediate and dramatic reduction in malaria incidence,” the Observer reports. “This has not happened.” Meanwhile, people whose homes were sprayed (sometimes without their consent or knowledge) have complained of “stomach problems, headaches, flu and red eyes.” Bernard Opio, whose home was sprayed in his absence, returned to find “the mosquitoes are still there. They’re coming into the house.” Ellady Muyambi, General Secretary of Uganda Network for Toxic Free Malaria Control warned most effects are long-term. Muyambi charged that the government “politicized the whole program” and the Observer reports residents were threatened that they would lose “access to public health services if they did not agree to have their houses sprayed.”
shareMORE – Uganda: Biting Truths from the World’s Malaria Capitol |
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Bees thrive in pesticide-free Paris
shareMORE – The Apimondia Web site |
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Yoplait yogurt: “Pinkwashing” breast cancer
October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and this means parades of pink ribbons adorning everything from T-shirts to yogurt containers. To help consumers make informed choices amidst this onslaught of cause-marketing JuJitzu, Breast Cancer Action’s (BCA) “Think before You Pink” campaign provides information on how much of each purchase actually goes towards breast cancer prevention and research. Since 2002, BCA has targeted “Pinkwashers” — companies that plaster products with little pink ribbons advertising their commitment to fighting breast cancer while actually manufacturing products linked to the disease. This year the target is Yoplait yogurt, which uses milk from cows treated with rBGH, a recombinant bovine growth hormone that has been linked to breast cancer as well as a host of other environmental health concerns. “Yoplait has made a public commitment to [fighting] breast cancer, but there are concerns about what’s under the lid,” says BCA Executive Director Barbara Brenner. “We’ve invited a dialogue with General Mills, which owns Yoplait, and look forward to a healthy change in their product.” rBGH has been banned in Japan, Canada, Australia, and the European Union; and major U.S. corporations like WalMart and Starbucks have stopped selling rBGH dairy products.
shareMORE – Take Action: Tell Yoplat to “Put a Lid on It” |
Scottish millionaire fined for illegal pesticides
John Dodd, the multimillionaire owner of the 9,670-acre Glenogil estate in Angus, Scotland, has been penalized after a police raid found illegal pesticides spread around his sprawling £4.5 million property. According to The Scotsman, Glenogil, a popular “shooting estate” used by hunters, was “implicated last year in the disappearance of a sea eagle, one of 15 released under a reintroduction program.” Sixty police raided the estate after finding “an illegal combination of lethal pesticides on a dead rabbit on a hillside close to the estate.” Police found additional evidence of the same pesticides, carbofuran and isofenphos, “on a dead pigeon laid out as bait” to lure game within range of hunters’ rifles. The Scottish Government subsequently cut Dodd’s agricultural subsidy by £107,659, “the largest ever financial penalty under European Union legislation that demands landowners protect wildlife to qualify for farm subsidies.” The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds noted that “agricultural grants to landowners rightly come with conditions” that include requiring “that those receiving public payments protect our national heritage, and that includes birds of prey.” Dodd is expected to appeal the penalty.
shareMORE – EPA to cancel carbofuran |
Rising oil costs benefit organic produce
A new study by Anderson’s, a UK farm business consulting organization, predicts the rising cost of fossil fuel will make organic food production more cost effective. According to The Telegraph, “the price of oil could soon make cereal crops grown with fertilizers more expensive than those produced more naturally.” With oil expected to top $200 a barrel in five to 10 years, the profit margin on organic barley, oil and wheat will be higher than for non-organic crops. This is good news for Britain’s organic producers, following on the heels of troubling reports in late August that sales of organic foods had fallen 20 percent since the first of the year. As the Telegraph explains: “Industrial farming relies on fossil fuels to mine, manufacture and transport fertilizers which replace nutrients in the soil. Organic farming, however, improves soil fertility through crop rotations and is less affected by oil prices.” Peter Metchett, an official with Britain’s Soil Association, which advocates organic farming, predicts “as oil inevitably becomes scarcer and costs more, economic forces will increasingly favor organic farming.” While organic systems “are not perfect,” Metchett added, “they do use less energy, generally emit fewer greenhouse gases, can sequester carbon in the soil, provide more jobs and support more wildlife. This report suggests they could also offer a more secure long-term financial future for the UK’s farmers.”
shareMORE – Rodale Institute on organic agriculture and global warming
Health and toxics activists press candidates to protect human health
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