The EPA has, for decades, steadfastly refused to comply with its obligation under the Endangered Species Act to assess the harms of pesticides to protected plants and animals. But it was finally forced to do this evaluation under the terms of a 2016 legal agreement with the Center.
The Environmental Protection Agency released a draft biological evaluation
today finding that glyphosate is likely to injure or kill 93% of the plants
and animals protected under the Endangered Species Act.
The long-anticipated draft biological evaluation released by the agency’s
pesticide office found that 1,676 endangered species are likely to be harmed
by glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup and the world’s most-used
pesticide.
The draft biological opinion also found that glyphosate adversely modifies
critical habitat for 759 endangered species, or 96% of all species for which
critical habitat has been designated.
“The hideous impacts of glyphosate on the nation’s most endangered species
are impossible to ignore now,” said Lori Ann Burd, environmental health
director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Glyphosate use is so
widespread that even the EPA’s notoriously industry-friendly pesticide
office had to conclude that there are hardly any endangered species that can
manage to evade its toxic impacts.”
Hundreds of millions of pounds of glyphosate are used each year in the
United States, mostly in agriculture but also on lawns, gardens,
landscaping, roadsides, schoolyards, national forests, rangelands, power
lines and more.
According to the EPA, 280 million pounds of glyphosate are used just in
agriculture, and glyphosate is sprayed on 298 million acres of crop land
each year. Eighty-four percent of glyphosate pounds applied in agriculture
are applied to soy, corn and cotton, commodity crops that are genetically
engineered to tolerate being drenched with quantities of glyphosate that
would normally kill a plant.
Glyphosate is also widely used in fruit and vegetable production.
“As we prepare to feast on our favorite Thanksgiving dishes, the ugly truth
of how harmful industrial-scale agriculture has become in the U.S. has never
been so apparent,” said Burd. “If we want to stop the extinction of amazing
creatures like monarch butterflies, we need the EPA to take action to stop
the out-of-control spraying of deadly poisons.”
The EPA has, for decades, steadfastly refused to comply with its obligation
under the Endangered Species Act to assess the harms of pesticides to
protected plants and animals. But it was finally forced to do this
evaluation under the terms of a 2016 legal agreement with the Center.
Emails obtained in litigation brought against Monsanto/Bayer by cancer
victims and their families have uncovered a disturbingly cozy relationship
between the agency and the company on matters involving the glyphosate risk
assessment.
In one example, when the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
announced it would be reviewing glyphosate’s safety, an EPA official assured
Monsanto he would work to thwart the review, saying, “If I can kill this, I
should get a medal.” The Health and Human Services review was delayed for
three years.
Monsanto/Bayer has also enjoyed broad support from the Trump White House. A
domestic policy advisor in the Trump administration stated, “We have
Monsanto’s back on pesticides regulation.”
Earlier this year, relying on confidential industry research, the EPA
reapproved glyphosate. The EPA’s assessment contradicts a 2015 World Health
Organization analysis of published research that determined glyphosate is a
probable carcinogen.
President-elect Joe Biden has already tapped Michael McCabe, a former
consultant to chemical giant DuPont, to join his Environmental Protection
Agency transition board, drawing broad outrage, including from Erin
Brockovich.
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