This
was talked about and predicted when I was researching GE, back in the
late 90's
Texas
Requests ‘Emergency Use’ of Restricted Herbicide to Kill
Superweeds
The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is requesting comments on
a petition
filed by the Texas Department of Agriculture to permit emergency use
of the hazardous herbicide propazine to kill herbicide resistant
weeds infesting Texas cotton. Calling the resistant weeds an
emergency, Texas requested to use hundreds of thousands of pounds of
the toxic chemical on up to 3 million acres of cotton.
Glyphosate resistant Palmer amaranth, also known as pigweed, flanks a conventional upland cotton crop in Georgia. Photo credit: Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) Response to Pendimethalin Formulation, Timing, and Method of Application via Creative Commons
“This
request clearly demonstrates that herbicide-resistant crops—by
generating
an epidemic of resistant weeds—lead
directly to increased use of hazardous chemicals,” said Bill
Freese, a science policy analyst at Center
for Food Safety.
“EPA should reject this request.”
Propazine
is a possible human carcinogen and a “restricted use pesticide”—the
EPA’s category for particularly hazardous agricultural chemicals.
The EPA has found that propazine, like
atrazine,
is an endocrine disruptor (disrupts
the hormonal system)
and that when fed to pregnant rats, it causes birth defects in their
young. Propazine is persistent, requiring years to break down, and is
detected in both ground and surface waters. The European Union has
banned propazine due to its toxicity.
Granting
the emergency request to use propazine to kill glyphosate-resistant
Palmer amaranth—also known as pigweed—would lead to a 10-fold
increase in the use of the toxic herbicide, from just 20,000-50,000
pounds in 2010 and 2011 to 280,000 pounds per year.
“Herbicide-resistant
crops lead to increased herbicide use and this is just the
beginning,” added Freese. “Monsanto,
Dow Chemical and the other pesticide-seed giants have developed a
host of genetically engineered crops that will trigger a huge spike
in the use of toxic weed-killers. This is hazardous to farmers, to
consumers and to the environment.”
“USDA
and EPA need to do their job of protecting American citizens and
agriculture by rejecting this request. They should also stop these
companies’ from introducing more pesticide-promoting, genetically
engineered crops,” said Freese.
Glyphosate-resistant
Palmer amaranth is one of 14 glyphosate-resistant weed species that
have been generated
by intensive use of glyphosate with Monsanto’s Roundup Ready crops,
which are genetically engineered to withstand repeated dousing with
the herbicide. Texas’ 3 million acres of cotton represents
about one-quarter of the U.S.’ annual production.
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