Cape Breton Post

‘False warning’

Agricultur­al groups challenge California weed killer warning

- BY DAVID A. LIEB

A coalition of a dozen national and Midwestern agricultur­al groups sued on Wednesday to try to overturn a California decision that could result in labels warning that the popular weed-killer Roundup can cause cancer.

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Sacramento, Calif., seeks an injunction barring the state from enforcing what the suit describes as a “false” and “misleading” warning. It claims California’s decision violates constituti­onal due-process and free-speech rights and should be superseded by federal regulation­s.

Roundup’s main ingredient, glyphosate, is not restricted by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, and has been used widely since 1974 as a means of killing unwanted weeds while leaving crops and other plants alive.

But the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer, based in Lyon, France, has classified it as “a probable human carcinogen.” That prompted the California Office of Environmen­tal Health Hazard Assessment to add glyphosate this summer to a list of chemicals known to cause cancer. The listing could eventually lead to a requiremen­t for warning labels on the product.

The plaintiffs include the national wheat and corn growers associatio­ns, state agricultur­e and business organizati­ons in Iowa, Missouri, North Dakota and South Dakota, and a regional group representi­ng herbicide sellers in California, Arizona and Hawaii. The plaintiffs also include St. Louis-based Monsanto Co., which makes Roundup.

The lawsuit contends that California’s “false warning” has harmed Monsanto’s reputation and its investment of “hundreds of millions of dollars” into the herbicide and its related glyphosate-tolerant seeds.

The suit also alleges a rippleeffe­ct on food production across the country. It says entities that process crops for food products sold in California would have to stop using glyphosate-treated crops, add warning labels that could diminish demand for their products or engage in costly tests.

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