Very timely report coming out to coincide with my article the other day, Destroying an ecosystem - Paradise Lost
Roundup
weedkiller can 'probably' cause cancer, warns WHO
Health
report claims worldwide product Roundup contains a carcinogenic
ingredient
21
March, 2015
One
of the world's most popular weed killers – and the most widely used
kind in the US – can "probably" cause cancer, according
to United Nations health chiefs.
The
World Health Organisation’s (WHO) cancer arm has announced that
best-selling 'Roundup', produced by Monsanto, contains an active
ingredient that is "classified as probably carcinogenic to
humans".
Amateur
gardeners and professional farmers have been urged to “think very
carefully” about using the popular herbicide after a report was
published in clinical journal Lancet Oncology on Friday.
The
report revealed glyphosate was “classified as probably carcinogenic
to humans”.
It
also said there was "limited evidence" that the key
ingredient was carcinogenic in humans for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Monsanto,
the world's largest seed company, said scientific data does not
support the conclusions and called on WHO to hold an urgent meeting
to explain the findings.
The
report was also posted on the website of the International Agency for
Research on Cancer (IARC), the France-based arm of the WHO.
Philip
Miller, Monsanto's vice-president of global regulatory affairs, said:
"We don't know how the IARC could reach a conclusion that is
such a dramatic departure from the conclusion reached by all
regulatory agencies around the globe.”
Concerns
about glyphosate on food have been a hot topic of debate in the
United States recently, and contributed to the passage in Vermont
last year of the country's first mandatory labelling law for foods
that are genetically modified.
In
2013, Monsanto requested and received approval from the US
Environmental Protection Agency for increased tolerance levels for
glyphosate.
The
US government says the herbicide is considered safe.
But
Andreas Kortenkamp, professor of human toxicology at Brunel
University, London, said that the people who are most at risk are
those applying the weedkiller to their plants.
He
said: “Professional gardeners would use industrial strength
glyphosate to totally wipe their garden of all plants. Amateur
gardeners can also buy it as Roundup in a formulation which is not as
strong.
“Anyone
who sprays it could get a whiff of it. People should be very careful
with this stuff and consider whether they need it. Home gardeners
should hand weed to be on the safe side.”
Glyphosate
is mainly used on crops such as corn and soybeans that are
genetically modified to survive it and the recent report said the
weed killer has been detected in food, water and air after it has
been sprayed.
However,
it also said glyphosate use is generally low in and near homes where
the general public would face the greatest risk of exposure.
The
evidence for the organisation’s conclusion was from studies of
exposure, mostly agricultural, in the United States, Canada, and
Sweden that were published since 2001.
Carcinogens
are substances that can lead to cancer under certain levels of
exposure.
Monsanto's
stock price rose 0.3 per cent on Friday to $115.75 after setting a
four-month low on Thursday.
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