Center for
Biological Diversity
March 2017
Enlist crops and Enlist Duo are part of a disturbing, industry-wide trend where crops are genetically engineered to withstand multiple pesticides, allowing pesticide companies like Dow and Monsanto to sell both expensive GE seeds and large quantities of the pesticide cocktails that are sprayed on them. While these GE crop systems initially provide a quick-fix way to kill weeds, the intensive spraying triggers rapid evolution of weed resistance to the chemicals. Just as overuse of antibiotics breeds resistant bugs and more antibiotics to kill them, so these GE crop systems drive a toxic spiral of increasing weed resistance and pesticide use.
Farmers, conservation groups and food- and farm-justice organizations
sued the Environmental Protection Agency under new administrator Scott
Pruitt today for approving Dow AgroScience’s highly toxic Enlist Duo. The
novel mixture of the weed-killing chemicals glyphosate and 2,4-D is sprayed
directly on corn, soybean and cotton plants that are genetically engineered
by Dow to survive exposure to the pesticide. The EPA approved use of the
pesticide in 34 states, posing extensive risk to rural communities, food
supplies and the environment.
Farmers will be hit hard by the human-health harms of Enlist Duo, and are
put at risk financially by 2,4-D’s known tendency to volatize, drift and
damage neighboring crops. The U.S. Department of Agriculture projects that
Enlist Duo’s approval will lead to as much as a seven-fold increase in
agricultural use of 2,4-D — a component of the infamous Vietnam-era
defoliant “Agent Orange” that has been linked to Parkinson’s disease,
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and other reproductive problems. The other component
of Enlist Duo is glyphosate, the active ingredient in Monsanto’s flagship
pesticide Roundup. Glyphosate was classified as a probable human carcinogen
by the World Health Organization in 2015.
This is the second lawsuit the groups have had to bring over the product.
After the groups challenged its initial approval in 2014, the Obama
administration agreed to reanalyze some of its impacts. Unfortunately the
EPA then reaffirmed its original approval and dramatically expanded it,
allowing Enlist Duo to be sprayed in more than twice as many states and on
cotton in addition to corn and soybeans.
Enlist crops and Enlist Duo are part of a disturbing, industry-wide trend
where crops are genetically engineered to withstand multiple pesticides,
allowing pesticide companies like Dow and Monsanto to sell both expensive GE
seeds and large quantities of the pesticide cocktails that are sprayed on
them. While these GE crop systems initially provide a quick-fix way to kill
weeds, the intensive spraying triggers rapid evolution of weed resistance to
the chemicals. Just as overuse of antibiotics breeds resistant bugs and more
antibiotics to kill them, so these GE crop systems drive a toxic spiral of
increasing weed resistance and pesticide use.
In addition to health risks, significant crop damage from pesticide drift,
and increases in both weed resistance and pesticide use, spraying Enlist Duo
on millions of acres will contaminate waterways and important wildlife
habitat. The EPA’s own assessments found that Enlist Duo is highly toxic to
numerous plants and animals, including endangered whooping cranes, Indiana
bats and Hines emerald dragonflies found in or near agricultural fields.
The petitioners bringing the lawsuit are National Family Farm Coalition,
Family Farm Defenders, Pesticide Action Network North America, Beyond
Pesticides, Center for Food Safety and the Center for Biological Diversity,
represented jointly by legal counsel from Earthjustice and Center for Food
Safety.
Quotes
“In reissuing an expanded approval for this toxic chemical cocktail, the
EPA has shown an utter disregard for human health, our drinking water and
iconic endangered species like whooping cranes,” said Stephanie Parent, a
senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The law requires
reasonable safeguards, and the EPA has left us with no choice but to force
the issue in this suit.”
“Further industrialization of agriculture through Dow’s chemical solutions
will lead to fewer family farmers, more pollution and more resistant weeds,
but that will be okay for chemical companies like Dow with only one solution
to every problem in agriculture — a sledgehammer of more chemicals and the
GMOs immune to them. Enlist Duo’s own label recognizes there may be weed
biotypes already resistant to glyphosate or 2,4-D,” said George Naylor of
the National Family Farm Coalition, who farms non-genetically-engineered
crops in Iowa.
Said Jim Goodman, Family Farm Defenders board member and organic farmer from
Wonewoc, Wisconsin: “Roundup was initially touted as a replacement for
older, more dangerous chemicals like 2,4-D. Now that Roundup, the widely
used carcinogenic pesticide, is failing to kill weeds, Dow is bringing back
2,4-D and teaming them up to create a more toxic mix than ever. Will the
buffer strips on my organic farm be adequate protection from the more
volatile drift-prone nature of 2,4-D? I should not be put in the position to
find out.”
“Scott Pruitt and the Trump administration are endangering farmers and the
environment by caving to Big Ag and approving this highly toxic pesticide
combo,” said Sylvia Wu, staff attorney for Center for Food Safety and legal
counsel in the case. “Fortunately we have laws written to protect farmers
and the environment, and we intend to have the Court enforce them.”
Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff said: “EPA knows that spraying a hundred
thousand tons of this pesticide on millions of acres every year will
threaten the survival and recovery of some of our most iconic endangered
species, but it refuses to follow the law that protects them. We will hold
EPA accountable.”
“The lack of vision and oversight by our federal agencies is outrageous,”
said Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, a senior scientist at Pesticide Action Network
North America. “By continuing to defer to the pesticide industry’s every
wish, EPA shirks its duty to protect the health of rural communities and the
livelihoods of farmers. It also locks us into a failed and obsolete model of
chemical-intensive agriculture, rather than spearheading a transition to the
healthy, vibrant food and farming system that Americans deserve. ”
“EPA’s registration of Enlist Duo, which causes unreasonable adverse effects
to health and the environment, is responsible for increased 2,4-D use — as
much as a seven-fold increase to 176 million per year by 2020, without the
economic return achieved by those who practice sustainable organic
production,” said Jay Feldman, executive director of Beyond Pesticides.
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