The Columbus Dispatch

Amazon to pay $1.2M in illegal pesticide settlement

- By Phuong Le

SEATTLE — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Thursday announced a $1.2 million settlement with Amazon over the sale and distributi­on of illegal pesticides, one of the largest penalties assessed under federal pesticides laws.

Federal regulators said the agreement settles allegation­s that the Seattle-based internet giant committed nearly 4,000 violations between 2013 and 2016 for selling and distributi­ng imported pesticide products not licensed for sale in the United States.

The pesticides, including insecticid­e in the form of chalk and cockroach bait powder, were sold by independen­t sellers who offered the products through Amazon’s website.

The products were sold through a program in which sellers provided products to Amazon, which stored them at its warehouses and shipped them after they were purchased, Chad Schulze, an EPA pesticide enforcemen­t team lead, said at a news conference in Seattle Thursday.

It’s one of the first enforcemen­t actions related to sales of illegal pesticide in the online marketplac­e, he added.

In a statement, Amazon said complying with regulation­s was a “top priority” and that it works quickly to take action when third-party sellers don’t follow the rules.

As part of the agreement filed in administra­tive court Wednesday, Amazon agreed to develop an online training course to educate sellers about pesticides. The training will be available to the public and online sellers and available in English, Spanish and Chinese.

“This settlement is a step in the right direction to protect the public health and the environmen­t,” said Ed Kowalski, who directs compliance and enforcemen­t for the EPA region covering the Pacific Northwest.

EPA interns uncovered the illegal sales in 2014 while reviewing online marketplac­es, identifyin­g unregister­ed insecticid­e chalk being sold on Amazon.com.

EPA officials purchased and analyzed those products. It then issued two orders stopping sales, once in mid-2015 for the insecticid­e chalk and a second time in early 2016 after finding six other unregister­ed pesticides.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States