Upcoming
EPA Meetings on Safety of Monsanto Weed Killer Drawing Scrutiny
Carey
Gillam Veteran
journalist; Research Director for U.S. Right to Know, a
non-profit consumer education group
Bayer
better be paying attention to this.
The
German company’s
intended $66
billion acquisition of Monsanto Co. comes amid growing
concern over the future of the company’s top-selling weed
killer, a chemical called glyphosate that Monsanto introduced to
the world 40 years ago as the active ingredient in its Roundup
herbicide. Monsanto reaps billions of dollars annually, roughly
a third of its sales, from those products.
So it’s
no small matter that in mid-October the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) plans to spend four days
holding public
meetings with a scientific advisory panel on the topic of
whether or not glyphosate can cause cancer. The idea of shining
a public spotlight on this mounting concern about the world’s
most widely used herbicide has not set well with Monsanto and
the rest of the industry that profits from glyphosate products
like Roundup. Agrichemical interests have gone so far as
to tell the
EPA that the meetings should not be held at all, and have
said that if they are, many of the world’s top scientists should
be excluded from participating.
The
industry clearly does not welcome the public scrutiny the
meetings bring, but it should be satisfied that the EPA has made
it clear it has no intention of contradicting Monsanto’s claims
of glyphosate’s safety. After all, in a Sept. 12 report issued
to the public, the EPA offered a
227-page
evaluation of glyphosate’s cancer-causing potential that
ended with a “proposed” conclusion that glyphosate was ‘“not
likely to be carcinogenic to human’ at doses relevant to human
health risk assessment.” All of this before the meetings are
held.
To its
credit, the EPA did issue several caveats in that report,
acknowledging that some research does link glyphosate to cancer,
but offering various explanations as to why the agency doesn’t
believe those study results are significant, and/or are
outweighed by other studies. The agency also added a host of
qualifiers, stating that with respect to epidemiological
studies, the data is limited and outdated. Because there has
been such an “increased use of glyphosate following the
introduction of glyphosate-tolerant crops in 1996, there is a
need for more recent studies since a large number of studies
were conducted prior to 1996,” the EPA stated. The agency also
said that research needs to be done on glyphosate formulations,
not just glyphosate alone.
And the
agency included a specific caveat with respect to research tying
glyphosate to non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), saying: “There are
conflicting views on how to interpret the overall results for
NHL. Some believe that the data are indicative of a potential
association between glyphosate exposure and risk of NHL.” The
agency added: “Due to study limitations and contradictory
results across studies... a conclusion regarding the association
between glyphosate exposure and risk of NHL cannot be determined
based on the available data.”
There is
obviously a lot at stake - Monsanto is currently being sued by
dozens of people who say the company’s Roundup herbicide gave
them or their family members NHL, and the company is fighting a
court battle with the state of California over regulatory
efforts to add glyphosate to a list of known or probable
carcinogens. And there remains the matter of the EPA’s long
overdue environmental and health risk assessment for glyphosate,
in which the EPA could add restrictions to the use of glyphosate
if the agency deems those are necessary. That risk assessment
was due out in 2015. Then the agency said it would be released
in 2016. Now the agency says it may be completed by spring of
2017.
With the
Bayer acquisition, the lawsuits and the risk assessment looming,
Monsanto has been pulling out all the stops to defend
glyphosate. The pressure on the EPA to defend glyphosate began
immediately after the World Health Organization’s International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) declared in March 2015 that
research showed glyphosate was
“probably”
carcinogenic to humans. The IARC decision was announced on
Friday, March 20, 2015 and by the following Monday morning,
Monsanto’s Dan Jenkins, the company’s regulatory affairs leader,
was already
calling and
emailing EPA officials demanding they “correct” the record
on glyphosate. Emails obtained through Freedom of Information
request show Jenkins submitted
“talking
points” to the EPA to try to contradict IARC. And since
then Monsanto has only intensified its efforts to invalidate the
findings of the IARC group, attacking the veteran scientists as
an “
unelected,
undemocratic, unaccountable and foreign body.”
Monsanto has also subpoenaed emails and other records from the
chairman of that IARC committee,
Aaron Blair, a
scientist emeritus at the National Cancer Institute, who served
as chairman of the IARC team. Blair has a long career of
accolades and appointments that acknowledge his expertise, and
he has served on numerous national and international scientific
review groups, including for the EPA. But Monsanto has deemed
Blair’s work suspect.
And
Monsanto’s apparently has done some arm-twisting in Congress. On
Monday, the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform wrote to the
National
Institutes of Health, reciting many of the complaints
Monsanto and its allies have made about IARC and challenging
grants the NIH has made to IARC.
The EPA’s
appearance of aligning with Monsanto angers many in the
scientific community who say the EPA is straying from
established scientific principles and ignoring key evidence so
it can keep the corporate interests who profit from glyphosate
herbicides happy
“This
chemical is a probable human carcinogen by any reasonable
definition. It is nonsense to say otherwise,” said
Christopher
Portier, former director of the National Center for
Environmental Health and Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). Prior to that role, Portier spent 32 years with the
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS),
where he served as the NIEHS associate director, director of the
Environmental Toxicology Program, and associate director of the
National Toxicology Program. In retirement, Portier, who was an
“invited specialist” to the IARC review on glyphosate, has done
some part-time work for the Environmental Defense Fund.
Portier
and more than 90 other international scientists have issued a
detailed
report laying out the specific research that ties
glyphosate to cancer both in animal studies and in human
observations. The scientists said the only way for regulators to
discount the evidence is to bend well-established rules for
scientific evaluations. They say available human evidence does
show an association between glyphosate and non-Hodgkin lymphoma;
while significant carcinogenic effects are seen in laboratory
animals for rare kidney and other types of tumors. There is also
“strong evidence of genotoxicity and oxidative stress,”
including findings of DNA damage in the peripheral blood of
people exposed to glyphosate, the scientists said.
“The most
appropriate and scientifically based evaluation of the cancers
reported in humans and laboratory animals as well as supportive
mechanistic data is that glyphosate is a probable human
carcinogen,” the report states. “On the basis of this conclusion
and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it is reasonable
to conclude that glyphosate formulations should also be
considered likely human carcinogens.”
“The EPA
is in a bad spot with this. The pushback really has come out of
the industry based on things that are not scientifically sound,”
said Maarten Bosland, one of the authors of the report on
glyphosate research. Bosland is director of the Center for
Global Health Outreach Department of Pathology at The University
of Illinois at Chicago, and holds a Ph.D. in experimental
pathology. “The amount of money that is involved in this
compound is gigantic. It’s a worldwide conglomerate of financial
interests that are affected by this.”
It seems
more than coincidental that the EPA’s rationale for dismissing
scientific studies that IARC said showed cancer links closely
dovetails with the findings of a 16-member Monsanto-funded
panel. That group of 16 scientists, all but four of whom
had previously
worked either as employees or consultants for Monsanto,
issued a
report in December that supported Monsanto’s contention
that there is no real evidence that glyphosate can cause cancer.
Leading the work was
Gary M.
Williams, director of environmental pathology and
toxicology at New York Medical College, and a consultant to
Monsanto. Williams has a history of publishing positive findings
about glyphosate; he was an author of one of Monsanto’s
most-touted
studies, a 2000 research report that concluded glyphosate
is not only not a carcinogen, but “is considered to be
practically nontoxic.”
That
panel is preparing to release five articles supporting
glyphosate safety in the journal
Critical
Reviews of Toxicology soon, according to Intertek
Scientific & Regulatory Consultancy, which was paid by
Monsanto to arrange the panel.
In the
EPA report, the one bright spot for critics of glyphosate is
that the EPA does call for more testing. Specifically, the
agency acknowledges the need to explore the fears that
glyphosate formulations may be more toxic than glyphosate alone.
The EPA is developing a “research plan” with the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to “evaluate the role
of glyphosate in product formulations and the differences in
formulation toxicity,” the EPA said.
Fresh
answers can’t come soon enough for consumers who worry about
persistent levels of glyphosate in the food they eat. The FDA
this year found
high levels
of glyphosate in U.S. honey, some levels more than double
what is considered safe in the European Union.
The
meetings in Washington run Oct. 18-21, and are expected to draw
a variety of attendees - lawyers, activists, farmers,
environmentalists and corporate allies are all making their
travel plans.
It should be interesting.
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