Showing posts with label Pesticides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pesticides. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

Ottawa's Devotion to a Popular Weedkiller Remains Steadfast. Is it True Love or Corporate Seduction?

CIRCA 2016

For those familiar with the mounting body of peer-reviewed evidence showing that the herbicide Roundup is probably harmful to animals, crops and humans, it may be hard to understand why the product remains so wildly popular. This story tells you why.

by Larry Powell


For years, Monsanto, the US-based chemical and agrifood giant which makes Roundup, has maintained a veritable media blitz.  


The ads are everywhere. Newspapers, radio, TV, online.


They sing the praises of Roundup and the seeds used to grow the crops. 


The corporation has manipulated the seeds to resist Roundup, by adding a gene from another species. It’s called genetic modification (GM) or transgenics. These "genetically-modified organisms," (GMOs) allow the Roundup to kill the weeds, but spare the crops. Hence the term, "Roundup-Ready" (RR).


Roundup has, for years, been referred to as Monsanto's "flagship" product and a key to its enormous commercial success. 


Monsanto and other such corporations now produce almost 200 similar formulations under different brand names. But Roundup, first registered in 1976, still dominates. The common, active ingredient in all of these is glyphosate.


While logging companies and homeowners use it on forests, lawns and gardens, it is the world's farmers who buy it most, spraying it on their food crops.


So the farmer, or primary food producer, has become Monsanto's "target audience." 


Roundup will keep your farm weed-free, help you produce more crop and put more money in your pocket. 


You are stewards of the land, the ads proclaim, on a mission with Monsanto as your partner, to achieve truly "sustainable agriculture" over the coming decades. 


Using Monsanto's chemical and seed technology, you can help reduce precious water and fuel usage and therefore greenhouse gas emissions, by fully one-third, "by 2030 or sooner."


Even the daunting task of feeding a soaring human population may be within reach. "There'll likely be 9 billion people in the world by mid-century," another ad reminds the producer,"so you'll need to produce as much food over the next 40 years as you have in the past 10 thousand!" 


To the farmer who wants to take these kinds of challenges seriously, this is heady stuff, indeed.


Meanwhile, growth prospects for the product seem to be going nowhere but upward.


Along with wheat, GM canola is arguably the most valuable crop and biggest food export in Canada. It relies totally on Roundup or another glyphosate-based herbicide, to succeed. 


Meanwhile, the goal of the Canola Council of Canada, representing producers, is to boost production by 65%, to 15 million tonnes over the next three years! 


How Else is Monsanto "Winning us Over?"


The corporation has skilfully crafted a winning combination of strategies to build good will at the community level and in the schools.


For example, there's the "Monsanto Fund Opportunity Scholarship" program. Since 1991, it has awarded well over $1 million to thousands of graduating grade 12 students from farm families. The money helps pay for their post-secondary education in agriculture or a related field.


The company also gives thousands of dollars to the "Made in Manitoba Breakfast Program," organized by a non-profit, charitable group. With the Monsanto logo fully on display, It travels across the province, feeding students full, hot breakfasts, helping them "explore the agriculture industry and learn where their food comes from." 


The program provides Monsanto with a golden opportunity to tell the world (and impressionable young people) about its philanthropic virtues, with nary a hint of the dark side of its products. 


And it would be the rare student, indeed who benefitted from the corporation's generosity, to raise a whisper of dissent in such an environment.


Academia, politicians and bureaucrats have long settled in with Monsanto, not as a maker of products which might need regulation, but as a partner, client or even bedfellow to be listened to and served.


Monsanto has the ready ear of lawmakers at the federal level. According to the Globe and Mail, the biotech industry, with Monsanto playing a leading role - held 50 meetings with federal politicians and government officials leading up to the defeat of a bill in parliament. That bill would have placed GM crops under more scrutiny when they are considered for foreign export.


For decades, the corporations's Canadian headquarters has been at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg. In 2010, as protestors demonstrated outside, Manitoba's Minister of Agriculture, Stan Struthers, lunched inside with company officials. The occasion was the grand opening of a $12 million, "state-of-the-art" centre, dedicated to the breeding efforts of Monsanto Canada's rapidly growing canola business. 


To this day, GM Canola is so prevalent, organic producers have complained their own fields have been contaminated and their markets destroyed, due to "pollen drift" from GM fields.


The Case Against Roundup


An examination of the research done into the safety of Roundup over the years, offers many disturbing glimpses into a product which achieves such pristine monocultures. 


Many authors have reported that in the past 30 years there has been a significant decline in amphibian populations in several different parts of the world. 


In 2005, a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh, Rick Relyea, carried out research which pointed the finger directly at Roundup. He concluded that the weed-killer "Can cause extremely high rates of mortality to amphibians that could lead to population declines."  Prof. Relyea, with the University's Department of Biological Sciences, noted that earlier tests in the laboratory had already shown that the herbicide may be highly lethal to North American tadpoles. So he set up tests exposing three species of frogs, both larvae and juveniles, to Roundup, outdoors, in what he called "more natural conditions." After a single day, "the Roundup had killed up to 86% of the juveniles and, in three weeks, up to 100% of the larvae." 


A body of research done here in Canada seems to counter claims by Roundup's maker, Monsanto, that it is safe.  


Five years ago, a graduate student at the University of Manitoba, Jennifer Magoon, found statistically significant links between the use of crop sprays and serious health problems with infants born in farming areas of the province where such sprays were commonly used.


Those problems included low birth weights, spina biffida, respiratory distress, jaundice, Down syndrome, cleft palate, retinal degeneration and cataracts. Her findings, two years in the making and reviewed and approved by her peers and superiors, do not mention Roundup. But she singled out herbicides as the class of crop chemical she was most concerned with. 


In 1997, the Ontario Farm Family Health Study surveyed almost 19 hundred male farmers in Ontario who'd been exposed to several chemicals, including glyphosate in their faming activities. It concluded that their partners were "more than twice as likely" to miscarry or give birth, prematurely.


In 2,001 another phase of the same study, surveyed almost 4 thousand pregnant farm women in the same province. All had been involved in farming activities, milking cows, cultivating or seeding the fields and sometimes helping their partners mix and apply the herbicides. 395 of those women experienced miscarriages. All had been exposed to a variety of pesticides, including glyphosate. 


In the words of the study, "Among older women (over 34) exposed to glyphosate, the risk of miscarriage was three times that for women of the same age who were not exposed to this active ingredient."


The French Connection


In 2009, laboratory findings by a leading French researcher, Gilles-Eric Séralini, proved consistent with that Canadian research. In his lab at the University of Caen, the molecular biologist demonstrated that, within 24 hours, the active ingredient in Roundup, glyphosate, was totally lethal to three different kinds of human cells (umbilical, embryonic and placental), at just a fraction of the concentrations used in agriculture and equal to those found in human and animal feed! 


Séralini was "surprised" to also discover that other ingredients in Roundup, besides glyphosate, were not the harmless substances the public had been led to believe. On the contrary, Roundup, as a mixture, was, in every test, always twice as deadly as glyphosate alone! One of those other ingredients (polyoxyethylene tallow amines, POEA), stated the researcher, has been clinically shown to cause "high mortality in fish and amphibians." Regulators had been legally classifying  "POEA" as simply "inert."


He also concluded, Roundup's residues "May thus enter the food chain, and glyphosate is found as a contaminant in rivers."


Can Roundup (glyphosate) Actually Damage Crops?


Extensive, multi-year research by an Agriculture Canada team led by Miriam Fernandez, published some two years ago, showed that use of glyphosate was actually a significant factor in the incidence of Fusarium head blight (FHB) and Common root rot (CRR) in wheat and barley crops planted up to 18 months after such application. Both FHB and CRR are considered serious diseases in these important cereal crops in places like eastern Saskatchewan, where the trials were conducted. (The study appeared in the European Journal of Agronomy in 2009.) While tillage practices were also found to have some effect, the team concluded, "Previous glyphosate use was consistently associated with higher FHB levels" … and "significantly increased" risk of the plant diseases. 


Can Fusarium Also Harm Animals and Humans?


According to the Mold and Bacterial Consulating Laboratories, fusarium toxins have been shown to cause a variety of toxic effects such as vomiting and feed refusal in livestock. They're also suspected of being poisonous to humans. 


The Federal Response


Health Canada (the federal Department which regulates pesticides through its Pesticide Management Regulatory Agency) told me, it was aware of the evidence documented here, but, that, "It did not raise immediate risk concerns that would have triggered regulatory action." 


Then, in December, the PMRA approved Roundup for yet another use, on mustard seed crops. It states," The evaluation of this glyphosate application indicated that the end-use product has merit and value and the human health and environmental risks associated with the new uses are acceptable."


Superweeds


Over the years, some weeds sprayed with Roundup (glyphosate) have developed resistance. In other words, they refuse to die. They're called "superweeds." Finding other ways to get rid of them can be a huge and expensive problem for farmers. "Kochia weed" was found apparently thriving in three fields sprayed with glyphosate in southern Alberta just last summer. Another superweed, Canada fleabane, was found in well over 100 sites in Ontario in the past couple of years. Monsanto has responded to the superweed crisis, not as a setback, but an opportunity. It now sells even more potent chemicals to "burn down" the superweeds.


The Court Ruling 


Last November, the Federal Court of Canada (FCC) asked the Minister of Health, Leona Aglukaag, to consider ordering a "special review" of the safety of glyphosate. (It is Health Canada, through the Pesticide Management Review Agency (PMRA), which regulates products such as Roundup.) Now, several months later, the Minister has declined to give me or even the court a definitive answer to the court's request. (According to the FCC, the Minister is neither required to abide by the court's request, or even inform it of what her decision is.) That ruling came down several months ago. Despite repeated requests from this author, the Minister has now fallen silent on the issue. 


The PMRA is conducting a review of glyphosate. But it is a longer-range, more routine examination than a "special review" would have been. That is unlikely to be completed for at least another year.


Reaction to the Court Ruling


It was Josette Wier, an environmental activist from BC, who started the legal ball rolling by asking the Minister for the special review, then being refused. (It was that refusal which sparked the court case.) 


But Ms. Wier refuses to accept the outcome as a defeat.


 "The ruling is only a small victory, but a victory, nevertheless."


"I truly feel that I am doing the job of government and that government has become the enemy.  Scientific facts mean nothing, as they are so embedded with industry. And Monsanto, Dow Chemicals etc... are so powerful. So only what is left is this awful job going through the court and wasting enormous amounts of time and money.  I guess if changes are to happen, one should not expect any result soon, even in one's lifetime. But what counts is to keep the flow going."

-30-

Friday, August 8, 2025

ROUNDUP CAUSES CANCER (VIDEO)

By Larry Powell

Italy’s renowned Ramazzini Institute has proven "40 ways from Sunday" that Roundup (and two other pesticide brands like it, whose main ingredient is glyphosate), do indeed cause cancer in lab rats. Read those findings here.
They confirm those of the International Agency for Research into Cancer (a branch of the World Health Organization) a decade ago. IARC warned then that “there’s sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity of glyphosate in experimental animals,” classifying it as “a probable human carcinogen.” 
This was sadly not enough to spark any action. Perhaps now...

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Neonics Threatening Our Pollinators

PAN

A social wasp (Vespula germanica) Photo by Alvesgaspa.

Over the last two decades, neonicotinoid pesticides, or neonics, have swiftly become the most widely used class of insecticides globally. Unfortunately for our pollinators, neonics are very efficient at dealing death. Story here. 

Friday, January 31, 2025

Inside Quebec's fight over bee-killing pesticides

Canada’s National Observer

Quebec farmer Jocelyn Michon quit cold turkey.

Not tobacco. Not alcohol. He quit using insecticide-coated seeds in his fields of corn and soy, an unorthodox move among non-organic grain farmers. Story here.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Health Canada probes claim that government officials helped pesticide company overturn a ban

CANADA'S                                                                                                         NATIONAL                                                                                                     OBSERVER

A bee forages on a cosmos flower.
A PinP photo.

Health Canada is investigating after Canada's National Observer revealed that government officials supported efforts by the pesticide industry to discredit a researcher's findings and overturn a proposed ban on a class of pesticides harmful to bees, the environment and human health. Story  here.

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

‘To say nothing is not public service’: former Agriculture Canada official raised red flags on pesticide

By Marc Fawcett-Atkinson | News | May 16th 2024

A former official in Canada's agriculture ministry accused the federal pesticide regulator of failing to assess the health risks posed by the controversial herbicide glyphosate, a key ingredient of Roundup, months before leaving the ministry.

The concerns from David Cox, who at the time was deputy director at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC), were revealed in a trove of emails distributed to high- and mid-level AAFC officials — including deputy minister Stefanie Beck — in June and October 2023. They were obtained by Canada's National Observer through an access to information request.

"I am not an expert but I do believe in raising red flags where I see large-scale risk exposure and peer-reviewed papers stating there are harms. To say nothing is not public service," wrote Cox in a June 14, 2023 email distributed to eight senior AAFC officials, including Beck. A spokesperson for AAFC said this week that Cox no longer works for the ministry.
Researchers have found that glyphosate, which is commonly labelled both an herbicide and a pesticide by the industry, can cause cancer, is toxic to the nervous system and harms animals' gut bacteria. The chemical is considered to be potentially carcinogenic by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. A recent Health Canada study concluded that the average Canadian has small amounts of glyphosate in their urine.

According to Cox's June 14, 2023 email, up to 90 per cent of Canadian "fields and horticulture crops, and their soils, have long-term exposure from ongoing" glyphosate use.

Nonetheless, according to the government's sales report, the chemical is by far Canada's most common herbicide, with over 50 million kilograms of the herbicide sold in Canada in 2020. It is used by farmers to kill weeds and logging companies to eradicate deciduous trees from their cutblocks. Pesticide regulators in Canada, the U.S. and the European Union have deemed glyphosate-based pesticides to be safe, despite a fast-growing body of research about the chemical's danger.

The revelations come as Canada's Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) — an agency within Health Canada — has doubled down on allowing glyphosate use in recent years despite lawsuits, sustained political criticism and growing global concern about the chemical's health impacts.

In a Thursday statement, AAFC said the "government of Canada takes pesticide safety very seriously and is committed to protecting the health of humans and the environment, including wildlife. To be used in Canada, a pesticide such as glyphosate must undergo a highly regulated, science-based risk assessment to ensure that it meets Health Canada’s human health and environment protection requirements."

A recent report by Aimpoint Research, funded by global pesticide giant Bayer, found that eliminating the pesticide's use would raise U.S. farmers' production costs by about $1.9 billion. Researchers have found that eliminating the current widespread use of glyphosate is possible, though they note the shift would require planning and efforts to support farmers in the transition.

E-mails reviewed by Canada's National Observer show that a former official within Agriculture Canada had repeatedly warned senior ministry officials about the potential harms of the popular herbicide glyphosate, as shown in research.
Primarily penned by Cox, the trove of emails also included a note written by Myriam Fernandez, an AAFC researcher specializing in organic agriculture. The messages show both employees raised the alarm about the health risks posed by glyphosate, citing emerging research about the chemical's role in harming the nervous system and pregnancy and potentially causing cancers.

In the June email, Cox wrote that "glyphosate concerns me as I receive peer-reviewed journals and papers from [AAFC researchers]" that run counter to the federal government's policy to consider the chemical to be safe. The findings, he suggested, left him concerned that Canadian agricultural policies and regulatory decisions for the chemical were failing to reflect the most modern research on the product's toxicity.

Cox continued sounding the alarm in a subsequent email sent on October 13, 2023 to Tom Rosser, AAFC's assistant deputy minister of market and industry services and Donald Boucher, AAFC director-general of sector development and analysis. In the note, he reiterated being "truly concerned about the growing peer-review literature about glyphosate health and environmental risks to the public."

He wrote that AAFC had become "too reliant or complacent" on the ability of Canada's regulator to properly evaluate glyphosate. That could lead the agency to overlook emerging science about the product's health impact and international efforts to rein in its use, potentially creating a "risk red flag scenario," he said.

Vietnam is the only country to have fully banned the chemical. Sri Lanka tried in 2015 and backed down in 2021; France, the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany have partially prohibited it. Germany and Mexico have pledged to fully ban the pesticide, but have not yet done so. It was almost banned across the EU last year, but the bloc's pesticide regulator renewed the pesticide's registration last year.

Cox noted that Canada's continued use of glyphosate — and AAFC's lack of a plan to help farmers use less of it — exposed Canada to future financial and trade risks if other countries ban products exposed to the chemical.

"For your sakes, please take this seriously if you haven't yet. Never been clear to me if these [concerns] are dismissed because of the policy paradigm driving the biotechnology agenda … or that I am seen as an organic arguer defaming [glyphosate]. I am just revealing context based on evidence I get from various sources," he wrote.

The documents released in the access to information request included a Jan. 18, 2023 email Cox and other AAFC staff and people involved in Canada's organic sector received from AAFC researcher Fernandez. The message included an 2022 study of glyphosate's health impact and noted that Fernandez was "gathering scientific publications on glyphosate impacts on the health of humans."

Cox forwarded the email to Rosser and Boucher and said he would add them to Fernandez's mailing list distributing new research about the health impacts of glyphosate. The documents do not include any response from either official.

"I wish that those opposed to organic agriculture, and who still believe that glyphosate is 'just like water,' would take the time to do a simple search for this type of peer-reviewed scientific publications, and read them," Fernandez wrote.

The revelations come amid growing concerns about Canada's pesticide regulator's ability to protect Canadians from harmful pesticides, including glyphosate.

Last year, Canada's National Observer found the agency had for years downplayed health and environmental concerns from its own scientists about the toxic pesticide chlorpyrifos. The agency also downplayed the health risks of the pesticide dimethyl tetrachloroterephtalate (DCPA) in the wake of an emergency warning from the EPA about the chemical.

The agency's transparency has also come into question after prominent health researcher Bruce Lanphear resigned from a scientific advisory position with the PMRA last year due to transparency issues. In his letter of resignation, he lambasted the organization's "obsolete" approach to pesticide regulation.

Moreover, in 2022, a coalition of health and environmental groups led by Ecojustice challenged the government's decision to renew glyphosate-based herbicide "Mad Dog Plus." The case alleges the government failed to assess research on the chemical's health risks published since it was re-approved by the regulator in 2017.

That case comes on the heels of a 2022 ruling by the Federal Court of Appeal that found the PMRA failed to justify its 2017 decision to re-approve the chemical.

"Interesting to see a deputy director at [AAFC] raising red flags," said Laura Bowman, an Ecojustice lawyer and pesticide expert. "The irony is that as more evidence piles up on glyphosate risks, the harder it is for regulators to keep up. That's why we brought the registration renewal litigation."

Cassie Barker, the senior program manager for toxics at Environmental Defence, was succinct about the implication of Cox's efforts to raise red flags about glyphosate.

"That's wild. I'm glad to hear it," she said.

Ottawa's Devotion to a Popular Weedkiller Remains Steadfast. Is it True Love or Corporate Seduction?

CIRCA 2016 For those familiar with the mounting body of peer-reviewed evidence showing that the herbicide Roundup is probably harmful to ani...