The Phnom Penh Post

Stalemate broken on weedkiller

- Lachlan Carmichael

EU COUNTRIES broke months of deadlock on Monday when they voted to renew the licence for the controvers­ial weedkiller glyphosate for five years after heavyweigh­t Germany surprising­ly voted in favour despite health concerns.

With the bloc’s largest population, Germany’s change of heart was instrument­al in ending the stalemate within the 28-nation union over the fate of the pesticide, which some critics fear causes cancer.

But its U-turn appeared also to reveal extraordin­ary tensions in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s efforts to form a new governing coalition, after a minister in Berlin said German officials in Brussels had disobeyed direct orders to abstain on the vote.

Glyphosate was introduced in 1974 by US agro-giant Monsanto under the brandname Roundup. A WHO study found it was “probably carcinogen­ic” but later studies have disagreed.

Eighteen of the 28 EU states voted in favour of the European Commission’s proposal for a five-year renewal, with nine including France voting against, and one abstaining.

“Today’s vote shows that when we all want to, we are able to share and accept our collective responsibi­lity in decision making,” EU Health Commission­er Vytenis Andriukait­is said in a statement.

Divisions over the weedkiller within the EU have dragged on since June 2016, when its previous 15-year licence expired and an 18-month extension was granted.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s condemned the decision.

“Today’s approval, even if only for five years, is a missed opportunit­y to get rid of this risky weedkiller and start to get farmers off the chemical treadmill,” said Adrian Bebb of Friends of the Earth Europe.

Greenpeace’s Franziska Achterberg said: “The people who are supposed to protect us from dangerous pesticides have failed to do their jobs and betrayed the trust Europeans place in them.”

Monsanto’s rival, the German chemical giant Bayer voiced support for a 15-year extension of the licence for glyphosate.

“Regulators and scientific bodies across the world, including in Europe . . . have care- fully evaluated the component and decided that glyphosate is safe,” it said in a statement.

Two weeks ago the European Commission, the EU executive, fell short of the majority needed to renew the licence when it expires on December 15, as only half of the 28 member states voted for its proposal.

Germany abstained from the last vote, but on Monday Berlin changed its mind after receiving assurances on animal welfare and private use of the weedkiller, a European source said.

However, German Environmen­t Minister Barbara Hendricks, of the Social Democrats who had initially refused to consider renewing their coalition with Merkel, said Agricultur­al Minister Christian Schmidt of the Merkel-allied CSU party had gone against her orders.

“Exactly two hours before the beginning of the meeting . . . I declared clearly to colleague Schmidt that I do not agree with an extension of the renewal,” she said.

But she said he had voted to renew the licence instead of abstaining as planned.

The previous abstention was a compromise between opposition to glyphosate in the environmen­tal ministry and support for it in the agricultur­e ministry.

Merkel said on Monday that her party was ready to hold serious talks with the Social Democrats to form a government, warning that time is pressing as Europe faces a slew of challenges.

But Social Democrat Bundestag representa­tive Andrea Nahles said Monday’s vote in Brussels represente­d “an obvious violation of trust on the part of the CSU”.

The decision marks a disappoint­ment for the French government, which pushed unsuccessf­ully for only a three-year licence following widespread concern in the country over the chemical’s health impact.

 ?? FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI/AFP ?? National Federation of Agricultur­al Holders’ Unions President Christiane Lambert reacts to the decision by EU states to renew the licence of weedkiller glyphosate.
FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI/AFP National Federation of Agricultur­al Holders’ Unions President Christiane Lambert reacts to the decision by EU states to renew the licence of weedkiller glyphosate.

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