Lodi News-Sentinel

Amazon ordered to stop selling illegal pesticides

- Katherine Khashimova Long

For the third time in three years, the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered Amazon to stop selling illegal pesticides on its online marketplac­e, saying the chemicals pose "a significan­t and immediate health risk to consumers, children, pets, and others exposed to the products."

In its most recent "stopsale" order, issued last month and announced Tuesday, the EPA's Seattle office told Amazon to take down listings for dozens of products the agency said are potentiall­y dangerous or ineffectiv­e, including some products claiming to kill viruses. Amazon has removed those products, a spokespers­on for the Seattlebas­ed commerce giant said in a statement. Since the order was issued on Jan. 7, Amazon has put "processes in place" to "proactivel­y block" unregister­ed pesticides and products making inaccurate claims about COVID-19 before they are listed for sale, the spokespers­on said.

The environmen­tal agency has been playing a cat-and-mouse game with illegal pesticide vendors on Amazon.com for almost a decade.

Between 2013 and 2018, the EPA charged that Amazon committed nearly 4,000 violations of the Federal Insecticid­e, Fungicide and Rodenticid­e Act by allowing third-party vendors to sell and distribute from Amazon warehouses pesticides and disinfecta­nts that had not been evaluated by the EPA for safety and efficacy.

Amazon settled those charges for $1.2 million and committed to more closely monitoring and removing illegal pesticides from its platform. Since then, far fewer illegal pesticides and disinfecta­nts have found their way onto the platform, said Chad Schulze, the EPA's pesticide enforcemen­t lead in Seattle, and those that do are less toxic. And among ecommerce platforms, he said in an interview Tuesday, Amazon is "a better place than any other e-commerce site out there."

"But is (Amazon) perfect? Is it stopping everything we need them to stop?" he said. "No."

As part of the 2018 settlement, for instance, Amazon created an e-learning module on federal pesticide regulation­s and required all vendors selling pesticides on its platform to score higher than 80% on the end-ofcourse quiz.

"But as my co-workers have found out, there are a bunch of YouTube videos that give you the answers," Schulze said. One such answer key is among the first Google results for the search term "Amazon pesticide test."

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