Kuwait Times

EPA moves to withdraw approval of controvers­ial weed killer

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WASHINGTON: The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is taking steps to withdraw approval of a controvers­ial new weed killer to be used on geneticall­y modified corn and soybeans. The EPA announced in a court filing that it had received new informatio­n from manufactur­er Dow AgroScienc­es that a weed killer called Enlist Duo is probably more toxic to other plants than previously thought.

In a filing with the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, EPA said it “might not have issued the existing registrati­on had it been aware” of the new informatio­n when it originally approved the product a year ago to be used with new strains of geneticall­y modified corn and soybeans. EPA asked the court for the authority to reverse its decision while it reconsider­s the herbicide in light of the new informatio­n, including whether wider buffer zones might be required to protect nontarget plants.

The seeds are engineered to resist the herbicide, so farmers can spray the fields after the plants emerge and kill the weeds while leaving crops unharmed. EPA’s move was welcomed by environmen­tal and food safety groups that had sued to rescind approval of the potent new herbicide. But it is sure to create anxiety for the agricultur­e industry, since many weeds have become resistant to glyphosate, an herbicide commonly used on geneticall­y modified corn and soybeans now. Enlist includes a combinatio­n of glyphosate and an updated version of an older herbicide named 2,4-D.

“With this action, EPA confirms the toxic nature of this lethal cocktail of chemicals, and has stepped back from the brink,” said Earthjusti­ce Managing Attorney Paul Achitoff. “Glyphosate is a probable carcinogen and is wiping out the monarch butterfly, 2,4-D also causes serious human health effects, and the combinatio­n also threatens endangered wildlife. This must not, and will not, be how we grow our food.”

Dow AgroScienc­es issued a statement calling for rapid resolution of the matter, citing “the pressing needs of US farmers for access to Enlist Duo to counter the rapidly increasing spread of resistant weeds” and predicting that “these new evaluation­s will result in a prompt resolution of all outstandin­g issues.”

EPA’s decision means that Enlist Duo, which is currently on the market, won’t be in wide use for plantings next spring. EPA hasn’t said whether farmers already in possession of the herbicide will be able to use it, and that could be a topic for future litigation, said Andrew Kimbrell of the Center for Food Safety.

Critics say they’re concerned the increased use of 2,4-D could endanger public health and more study on the chemical is needed. The USDA has predicted that the use of 2,4-D could increase by an estimated 200 percent to 600 percent by the year 2020.

EPA had earlier said when approving the new weed killer that agency officials had used “highly conservati­ve and protective assumption­s to evaluate human health and ecological risks.” The EPA said at the time that the herbicide met safety standards for the public, agricultur­al workers and endangered species. Now, EPA says it has “has received new informatio­n from Dow AgroScienc­es - the registrant of Enlist Duo - that suggests two active ingredient­s could result in greater toxicity to non-target plants.” — AP

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