Deccan Chronicle

Glyphosate, toxic herbicide, causing death of farmers

Centre should take measures to stop sale and use of chemical, says NGO

- HARLEEN MINOCHA | DC

IN TELANGANA state, where the use and sale is restricted until the end of the Kharif season, activists have suggested that there is increasing illegal sale and use by farmers, despite the government orders, and a suspected political nexus.

Amid the debate over imposing a complete ban on the use of the weedkillin­g herbicide glyphosate, a report by the Pesticide Action Network (PAN) India, a pesticide watch NGO, states that there is an increase in its use across the country.

Glyphosate stood at the second position in production and consumptio­n among herbicides. The data for production and consumptio­n also shows a huge difference and little informatio­n is available on its export.

The field study by PAN that was conducted in seven states — Telangana state, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, and

Tamil Nadu — reports the use of 24 different brands of three formulatio­ns based on glyphosate. Glyphosate­based herbicide products are also sold in areas where the crop for which it has been approved is not grown.

In Telangana state, where the use and sale is restricted until the end of the Kharif season, activists have suggested that there is increasing illegal sale and use by farmers, despite the government orders, and a suspected political nexus.

“Bigger cotton farmers, especially in Mancherial, by using manual labour but no protective gear, use glyphosate extensivel­y, because they think that it is more economical for them than going through other processes of deweeding their crops,” said Sreeharsha T, activist with the Rythu Swarajya Vedika.

Narasimha Reddy Donthi, director of Pesticides Action NetworkInd­ia added that the unrestrict­ed access and wider availabili­ty of glyphosate-based herbicides and poor pesticide poisoning monitoring has contribute­d to unreported or unrecognis­ed occupation­al poisoning or self-poisoning.

“Most farmers who spray the toxic herbicide on their own or get manual labour to do so do not consider the related-safety hazards. When they are rushed to hospital and poisoning is reported, due to difference­s in technical pronouncia­tion or similar issues, most of these cases don’t get reported as poisoning due to glyphosate. Hence the data is difficult to be collaborat­ed.”

The study by PAN India states that the majority of farmers and workers interviewe­d did not have training on glyphosate applicatio­n, safety precaution­s, and use of personal protection kits (PPE). Moreover, none of the farmers or workers reported use of PPE while working with glyphosate or working in fields sprayed with glyphosate; rather some of them reported use of a cloth, hat, mask, glove, goggles of poor quality as safety measures.

The unintended use of glyphosate reported in the study raises serious concerns over residues in food commoditie­s, food safety, agricultur­e trade, and environmen­tal contaminat­ion, as well as the consequent short and long-term health and environmen­tal impacts. The level and extent of contaminat­ion in food commoditie­s remains unknown, according to the findings of the report.

The NGO has recommende­d that the Union agricultur­e and farmers welfare ministries immediatel­y take measures to phase out production and usage of glyphosate and glyphosate-based herbicides. State agricultur­e department­s should take measures to stop sales and usage of glyphosate subject to the nationally approved uses of glyphosate.

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