The Guardian (USA)

EPA sued over reapproval of toxic herbicides using Agent Orange chemical

- Tom Perkins

Public health groups are suing the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency over the reapproval of two toxic herbicides made with an active ingredient in Agent Orange, a chemical weapon deployed by the US to destroy vegetation in the Vietnam war, and which caused huge health problems among soldiers and Vietnamese residents.

The federal suit alleges the EPA’s science shows the human health risks and harm to endangered species associated with widely spreading the chemical on US cropland, but the agency failed to properly calculate those risks during the reapproval process. The herbicide is also prone to damaging nonGMO crops or vegetation on neighborin­g fields.

The suit asks a federal judge to order the agency to rescind its approval and recalculat­e the environmen­tal and health risks using proper methodolog­y.

“[The herbicides] are highly toxic and have devastatin­g impacts on wildlife and rural communitie­s that live near sprayed fields,” said Kristina Sinclair, an attorney with the Center for Food Safety. The non-profit brought the suit with Pesticide Action Network North America, and Alianza Nacional de Campesinas.

It comes after a federal court invalidate­d the herbicides’ previous approval in late 2020, but the EPA still “rushed” to reapprove the herbicides, the complaint alleges.

The chemical 2,4-D, is used in Enlist One and Enlist Duo, which are applied to fields with corn, soybeans and cotton geneticall­y engineered to resist the herbicides. It is considered a likely carcinogen by the World Health Organizati­on, and, among other human health effects, is linked to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, birth defects and respirator­y problems.

The chemical is also thought to harm hundreds of endangered species including butterflie­s, birds, fish, deer, panthers and bats. It works by attacking the roots and leaves of weeds and causing them to produce unwanted cells, not unlike inducing cancer to kill or hobble it.

The suit also alleges the products’ approval threatens to increase the spread of new herbicide-resistant weeds because the EPA failed to properly mitigate risks, which will make it harder for farmers to manage troublesom­e weeds.

One of the Enlist products also uses glyphosate, a controvers­ial and highly toxic ingredient linked to cancer and subject to another lawsuit over EPA approval.

The EPA first approved Enlist One and Duo for use in several states in 2014, and since then has approved its applicatio­n across much of the US. The products are now widely used, but were up for a registrati­on renewal in 2021 that triggered a health review.

The EPA based its health and environmen­tal impact assessment­s on earlier usage levels, which the environmen­tal groups say dramatical­ly underestim­ate the threat.

The products were spread on about 1.5m acres of cropland in 2018, and the weed killer’s manufactur­er, Corteva, reported that use has since tripled, the complaint states.

Enlist is sometimes applied to the ground near the base of a plant and also sprayed over the top of farmland. While both methods cause harm because the chemicals accumulate in the environmen­t and run off into waterways, spraying the herbicide makes it more prone to drifting into neighborin­g fields.

The groups also allege that EPA violated the Endangered Species Act because the products threaten endangered species in rural areas across the US, but the agency did not properly consult with expert wildlife agencies.

Sinclair characteri­zed the move as an attempt to “skirt” the law, and said it was unclear why the EPA seems so determined to allow the use of the active ingredient for Agent Orange on cropland.

“I do not know and I wish I could tell you, but that’s why we are challengin­g it,” she added.

 ?? Photograph: Maika Elan/AP ?? A warning sign stands in a field contaminat­ed with Agent Orange near Danang airport, Vietnam.
Photograph: Maika Elan/AP A warning sign stands in a field contaminat­ed with Agent Orange near Danang airport, Vietnam.

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