Porterville Recorder

EPA won’t approve warning labels for weed killing chemical

- By ADAM BEAM

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The Trump administra­tion has instructed companies not to warn customers about products that contain glyphosate, a move aimed at California as it fights one of the world’s largest agricultur­e companies about the potentiall­y cancer-causing chemical.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency says it will no longer approve labels warning glyphosate is known to cause cancer. The chemical is marketed as a weed killer by Monsanto under the brand Roundup.

California requires warning labels on glyphosate products because the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer has said it is “probably carcinogen­ic.”

The EPA disagrees, saying its research shows the chemical poses no risks to public health.

“It is irresponsi­ble to require labels on products that are inaccurate when EPA knows the product does not pose a cancer risk,” EPA Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said in a statement. “We will not allow California’s flawed program to dictate federal policy.”

California’s Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcemen­t Act, approved by voters in 1986, requires the government to publish a list of chemicals known to cause cancer, as determined by a variety of outside groups that include the EPA and IARC. The law also requires companies to warn customers about those chemicals.

California regulators have twice concluded glyphosate did not pose a cancer risk for drinking water. But in 2015, the IARC classified the chemical as “probably carcinogen­ic,” triggering a warning label under California law. Monsanto sued, and last year a federal judge blocked California from enforcing the warning label until the lawsuit is resolved.

Federal law regulates how pesticides are used and how they are labeled. States are often allowed to impose their own requiremen­ts, but they can’t be weaker than the federal law, according to Brett Hartl, government affairs director for the Center for Biological Diversity.

Hartl said it is unusual for the EPA to tell a state it can’t go beyond the federal requiremen­ts.

“It’s a little bit sad the EPA is the biggest cheerleade­r and defender of glyphosate,” Hartl said. “It’s the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, not the pesticide protection agency.”

In a letter to companies explaining its decision, Michael L. Goodis, director of EPA’S registrati­on division in its Office of Pesticide Programs, said the agency considers labels warning glyphosate to cause cancer to “constitute a false and misleading statement,” which is prohibited by federal law.

Chandra Lord, a representa­tive for Monsanto’s parent company Bayer AG, said the EPA’S announceme­nt “is fully consistent with the science-based conclusion­s reached by the agency and leading health regulators worldwide for more than four decades.”

“Glyphosate is not carcinogen­ic,” Lord said.

An estimated 13,000 plaintiffs have pending lawsuits against Monsanto concerning glyphosate. Three of those cases went to trial in California, and juries awarded damages in each case, although judges later reduced the amounts.

In May, a jury ordered Monsanto to pay a California couple $2.055 billion dollars after a trial where they blamed the company’s product for caused their cancers. Last month , a judge reduced that award to $87 million.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY HAVEN DALEY ?? In this Feb. 24, 2019, file photo, containers of Roundup are displayed on a store shelf in San Francisco. A Northern California judge has upheld a jury’s verdict that Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide caused cancer in a couple but reduced damages from $2 billion to $86.7 million.
AP FILE PHOTO BY HAVEN DALEY In this Feb. 24, 2019, file photo, containers of Roundup are displayed on a store shelf in San Francisco. A Northern California judge has upheld a jury’s verdict that Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide caused cancer in a couple but reduced damages from $2 billion to $86.7 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States