The Borneo Post

French beekeepers accuse Bayer after glyphosate found in honey

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A BEEKEEPING cooperativ­e in northern France has filed a legal complaint against German chemicals giant Bayer after traces of the controvers­ial weedkiller glyphosate were detected in batches of honey, officials said Friday.

A beekeeping cooperativ­e in northern France has filed a legal complaint against German chemicals giant Bayer after traces of the controvers­ial weedkiller glyphosate were detected in batches of honey, officials said Friday.

The head of the cooperativ­e in the Aisne region, which represents some 200 beekeepers, said Famille Michaud, one of the country’s largest honey marketers, found the chemical in three batches supplied by one of its members.

“They systematic­ally analyse the honey shipments they receive, and they found glyphosate,” Jean-Marie Camus said. The weedkiller, introduced by the US agro- giant Monsanto under the Roundup brand name, is the most widely used in France, where President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to outlaw it by 2021.

It is suspected by some scientists of causing cancer, though the EU renewed the licence for glyphosate weedkiller­s last November despite deep divisions between member states.

Emmanuel Ludot, a lawyer for the cooperativ­e, said the tainted honey came from a producer whose hives are near extensive fields of sunflowers, beets and rapeseed.

“But you also can’t forget the weekend gardeners who often tend to use Roundup,” he said.

The complaint was filed to coincide with the closing of Monsanto’s merger with Bayer, creating an agrichemic­al behemoth which many environmen­tal activists denounce for its promotion of chemical herbicides as well as geneticall­y modified seeds.

Ludot hopes the complaint will prompt an inquiry to determine the percentage of glyphosate in the batches and any health consequenc­es it might have for humans.

“It’s also a matter of knowing how widespread this might be. Famille Michaud tells me this isn’t an isolated case,” he said.

Vincent Michaud, president of Familles Michaud, confirmed to AFP that “we regularly detect foreign substances, including glyphosate.”

If the weedkiller is found, he said, a supplier’s entire shipment is rejected. “Usually, beekeepers will say ‘ In that case I’ll sell the honey at a roadside stand or a market’, where there’s no quality control,” Michaud said.

“But this beekeeper had the courage to say ‘ I’m not going to be like everyone else, I’m going to file suit against Monsanto’,” he said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Roundup, the glyphosate-based weedkiller made by Monsanto, is the most widely used in France.
— AFP photo Roundup, the glyphosate-based weedkiller made by Monsanto, is the most widely used in France.

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