The Land — During the past half-century, atrazine has become one of the most widely used herbicides in Minnesota and the rest of the Midwest. Unfortunately, it is also top of the list in another category: it is the most commonly detected pesticide in our state’s surface and groundwater.
Atrazine contamination has been found from agricultural communities in southeast Minnesota to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. That’s a concern when one considers that there is an increasing body of science showing that exposure to the herbicide at even extremely low levels could pose significant health risks to humans and animals. That’s why it is so key that the Environmental Protection Agency’s current review of atrazine’s safety be based on science and what’s good for the public.
A report released Jan. 5 by the Land Stewardship Project and Pesticide Action Network North America documents Syngenta’s efforts to undermine what was supposed to be a thorough, transparent regulatory review of atrazine.
The report, “The Syngenta Corporation & Atrazine: The Cost to the Land, People & Democracy,” documents how the EPA review process that led to atrazine’s U.S. re-approval in 2003 was marred by closed-door meetings involving the Syngenta corporation and EPA officials. That review was also characterized by a lack of independent research and suppression of science that showed significant health and environmental problems associated with the herbicide.
The current EPA review of atrazine was launched in October and will continue until fall 2010. This review is a chance for the EPA to get it right and to use science in the public’s best interest.
One way to get it right is for government decision-makers, as well as the public, to ignore claims that atrazine is an irreplaceable corn production tool. As the report shows, farmers right here in Minnesota are raising corn without the controversial herbicide, as are farmers in the European Union, where atrazine is banned. And Wisconsin remains a top corn producing state, despite some of the toughest atrazine restrictions in the nation. Farmers are too innovative to allow one production tool to limit their choices when it comes to raising a crop.
The LSP/PAN report does not call for an outright ban of atrazine or any other herbicide. Many LSP farmer-members use pesticides in their cropping operations. But that means they rely on the EPA to use a transparent process when registering pesticides, one that is guided by science and focuses on protection of human health and the environment as well as production considerations.
It’s time for an objective examination of atrazine. The current review of atrazine should set a standard for decision-making in the interest of farmers and the public by, among other things, ensuring 100 percent transparency. That means no closed-door meetings and making all studies that are considered part of the review open to scientific and public scrutiny. Critical data should not be hidden from the public or from independent scientific examination by claiming it’s “confidential business information.” Peer review is the gold standard for scientific publication and should be a critical element in re-examination of atrazine.
Finally, studies funded by Syngenta should not dominate the review. As the LSP/PAN report documents, the corporation has engaged in undue influence on the atrazine registration process in the past. Assertions that studies the corporation submitted during the past review process were deeply flawed, and thus hampered sound decision-making, should be taken seriously.
We have strong concerns about how, despite scientific evidence to the contrary, Syngenta has continued to promote atrazine as completely safe. Because atrazine is such a major source of profit for Syngenta, the corporation has a major conflict of interest when it comes to this review. The problem is exacerbated by inadequate funding for independent scientific evaluation of products considered by the EPA for approval or post-approval review.
The safety of rural Minnesota’s drinking water should not be sacrificed for the sake of profit. That’s why, if after review the science indicates atrazine is a threat to health and/or the environment, the EPA must take swift and clear action to protect farmers and the public. The people who produce our food deserve at least that.
•••
This commentary was submitted by Bonnie Haugen and Dennis Johnson. Haugen is a Canton farmer and a member of the Land Stewardship Project’s board of directors. Johnson is a member of the LSP’s state policy committee, as well as an agricultural scientist at the University of Minnesota. “The Syngenta Corporation & Atrazine: The Cost to the Land, People & Democracy” is available at www.landstewardshipproject.org.
In 2008, Dan Mathews, vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said, "when you consider any movement for social change, it's really got to be seen as a generational one.
"If we as eaters insist on food being a smaller and smaller percentage of our spendable income by continuing to separate ourselves from the source of that food, it will become a race to the bottom for agriculture, for rural communities, and for everyone's quality of life."
Agriculture is a dynamic industry full of growth and change, and yet unlike many other industries, it remains blessed with an abundance of small family-run businesses.
As Obama’s energy taxes force reductions in coal and oil production, the price of U.S. energy will double and triple — and so will the costs of the things we buy.
The cost of the “free wind”? Projections are about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour — far higher than other energy sources. One of my neighbors has just invested $100,000 in a wind turbine. I think he’s wasted his money — and some of yours.
The earthquake in Haiti was a devastating blow — but we don’t know how to prevent earthquakes. On the other hand, we do know how to prevent 500,000 kids from going blind every year, and even dying, due to severe Vitamin A deficiency. But we’re not preventing the blindness or the deaths.
It is increasingly important to remember that almost any human activity of any size or consequence will have both negative and positive externalities. Perhaps the reason for little acknowledgment of the positive externalities is that they are the raison d’être for the activity in the first place.
The USDA seems to expect serious climate-related farming problems ahead, but the recent changes in global climate have been tiny — and in the “wrong” direction.
Commentary
Discussion
Commentary: EPA’s atrazine review must be open
Originally published in the January 22, 2010, print edition.
The Land — During the past half-century, atrazine has become one of the most widely used herbicides in Minnesota and the rest of the Midwest. Unfortunately, it is also top of the list in another category: it is the most commonly detected pesticide in our state’s surface and groundwater.
Atrazine contamination has been found from agricultural communities in southeast Minnesota to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. That’s a concern when one considers that there is an increasing body of science showing that exposure to the herbicide at even extremely low levels could pose significant health risks to humans and animals. That’s why it is so key that the Environmental Protection Agency’s current review of atrazine’s safety be based on science and what’s good for the public.
A report released Jan. 5 by the Land Stewardship Project and Pesticide Action Network North America documents Syngenta’s efforts to undermine what was supposed to be a thorough, transparent regulatory review of atrazine.
The report, “The Syngenta Corporation & Atrazine: The Cost to the Land, People & Democracy,” documents how the EPA review process that led to atrazine’s U.S. re-approval in 2003 was marred by closed-door meetings involving the Syngenta corporation and EPA officials. That review was also characterized by a lack of independent research and suppression of science that showed significant health and environmental problems associated with the herbicide.
The current EPA review of atrazine was launched in October and will continue until fall 2010. This review is a chance for the EPA to get it right and to use science in the public’s best interest.
One way to get it right is for government decision-makers, as well as the public, to ignore claims that atrazine is an irreplaceable corn production tool. As the report shows, farmers right here in Minnesota are raising corn without the controversial herbicide, as are farmers in the European Union, where atrazine is banned. And Wisconsin remains a top corn producing state, despite some of the toughest atrazine restrictions in the nation. Farmers are too innovative to allow one production tool to limit their choices when it comes to raising a crop.
The LSP/PAN report does not call for an outright ban of atrazine or any other herbicide. Many LSP farmer-members use pesticides in their cropping operations. But that means they rely on the EPA to use a transparent process when registering pesticides, one that is guided by science and focuses on protection of human health and the environment as well as production considerations.
It’s time for an objective examination of atrazine. The current review of atrazine should set a standard for decision-making in the interest of farmers and the public by, among other things, ensuring 100 percent transparency. That means no closed-door meetings and making all studies that are considered part of the review open to scientific and public scrutiny. Critical data should not be hidden from the public or from independent scientific examination by claiming it’s “confidential business information.” Peer review is the gold standard for scientific publication and should be a critical element in re-examination of atrazine.
Finally, studies funded by Syngenta should not dominate the review. As the LSP/PAN report documents, the corporation has engaged in undue influence on the atrazine registration process in the past. Assertions that studies the corporation submitted during the past review process were deeply flawed, and thus hampered sound decision-making, should be taken seriously.
We have strong concerns about how, despite scientific evidence to the contrary, Syngenta has continued to promote atrazine as completely safe. Because atrazine is such a major source of profit for Syngenta, the corporation has a major conflict of interest when it comes to this review. The problem is exacerbated by inadequate funding for independent scientific evaluation of products considered by the EPA for approval or post-approval review.
The safety of rural Minnesota’s drinking water should not be sacrificed for the sake of profit. That’s why, if after review the science indicates atrazine is a threat to health and/or the environment, the EPA must take swift and clear action to protect farmers and the public. The people who produce our food deserve at least that.
•••
This commentary was submitted by Bonnie Haugen and Dennis Johnson. Haugen is a Canton farmer and a member of the Land Stewardship Project’s board of directors. Johnson is a member of the LSP’s state policy committee, as well as an agricultural scientist at the University of Minnesota. “The Syngenta Corporation & Atrazine: The Cost to the Land, People & Democracy” is available at www.landstewardshipproject.org.
In 2008, Dan Mathews, vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said, "when you consider any movement for social change, it's really got to be seen as a generational one.
June 18, 2010
Biologists are again predicting massive species losses as the world warms. But where are the corpses?
June 18, 2010
"If we as eaters insist on food being a smaller and smaller percentage of our spendable income by continuing to separate ourselves from the source of that food, it will become a race to the bottom for agriculture, for rural communities, and for everyone's quality of life."
May 21, 2010
Agriculture is a dynamic industry full of growth and change, and yet unlike many other industries, it remains blessed with an abundance of small family-run businesses.
April 8, 2010
As Obama’s energy taxes force reductions in coal and oil production, the price of U.S. energy will double and triple — and so will the costs of the things we buy.
April 8, 2010
The cost of the “free wind”? Projections are about 17 cents per kilowatt-hour — far higher than other energy sources. One of my neighbors has just invested $100,000 in a wind turbine. I think he’s wasted his money — and some of yours.
February 26, 2010
The earthquake in Haiti was a devastating blow — but we don’t know how to prevent earthquakes. On the other hand, we do know how to prevent 500,000 kids from going blind every year, and even dying, due to severe Vitamin A deficiency. But we’re not preventing the blindness or the deaths.
February 12, 2010
Public deserves science-driven review of pesticide’s health, environmental impacts.
January 29, 2010
It is increasingly important to remember that almost any human activity of any size or consequence will have both negative and positive externalities. Perhaps the reason for little acknowledgment of the positive externalities is that they are the raison d’être for the activity in the first place.
January 29, 2010
The USDA seems to expect serious climate-related farming problems ahead, but the recent changes in global climate have been tiny — and in the “wrong” direction.
January 29, 2010
Powered by Local.com
Powered by Local.com
Site Map
© 2012 Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. · CNHI Classified Advertising Network · CNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2012. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope. Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
Privacy Policy | AP News Registry privacy policy
Terms and Conditions
Advertiser Index
The Land :: www.TheLandOnline.com 418 South Second Street, PO Box 3169 Mankato, MN 56001