Sunday, August 19, 2018
Home
Agrochemicals
GMO Foods
News
India bans 18 pesticides after reviewing 66 out of 104 used in country, leaves out monocrotophos, glyphosate
India bans 18 pesticides after reviewing 66 out of 104 used in country, leaves out monocrotophos, glyphosate
In 2013, some 23 children died when their mid-day meal was cooked in the same vessel that used for storing monocrotophos. In 2017, of the 40 who died in Yavatmal due to accidental inhalation of pesticides, 12 were died by inhaling monocrotophos. Earlier this week, the California Superior Court ruled that Roundup, which contains glyphosate, was the cause of cancer for Dewayne Johnson, a school groundskeeper. It ordered Monsanto, the manufacturer of the weedicide, to pay $289 (US dollars) million in damages. In India, glyphosate is the most commonly used weedicide.
According to the Directorate Of Plant Protection, Quarantine and Storage, 148 of the 414 metric tonnes of weedicides consumed in the country in 2014-15 was glyphosate. In 2015-16, a little more than 370 metric tonnes of monocrotophos was used on Indian soil. Both these pesticides do not figure in the list in the notification. “It looks like the authorities chose the pesticides, many of which were already on their way out. With delays up to two years, the pesticide industry had enough time to clear their stock,” said Kuruganti.
The gazette notification does not mention how banned pesticides will be recalled from shops and dealers, and how the government intends to dispose of them. Anupam Verma, who leads the committee that reviews the list of 66 pesticides and their usage in the country said that this was the first time that such a large number of pesticides were being banned at one go. The last time a pesticide ban made news was when endosulfan was banned by the Supreme Court after it reviewed the toxic effects in Kerala. “We did discuss a few strategies while reviewing the list. The steps (to remove existing stock from dealers) should have been taken much earlier. It is the responsibility of Registration Committee to implement the ban successively,” he told “For the effective implementation of the notification, the government must ask the pesticide industry to recall the pesticides banned with immediate effect from their dealers and dispose of the entire stocks following the guidelines of the Ministry of Environment and Forests for the disposal of hazardous waste,” Verma said.
Activists from Greenpeace India questioned the seemingly arbitrary selection of 18 pesticides out of the official list of 66. “We appreciate the government stands of banning 12 deadly pesticides with immediate effect and six more in the coming two years. But why out of 66 universally banned pesticides, have only 18 been banned that too after almost five years of commissioning and three years after the submission of the Anupam Verma committee report?” asked Sehar Iqbal, the manager food for life campaign, Greenpeace India. “The current ban leaves out monocrotophos and glyphosate, which still leaves farmers, farm workers and rural families (especially children) at risk and poisons the soil affecting farmer livelihoods, not to mention seriously compromising the health of consumers,” she said.
SK Malhotra, Agriculture Commissioner at the Department of Agriculture and Family Welfare, leads a committee to review the suggestions made by the Anupam Verma committee. He was not available for a comment, despite several attempts. The staff at the Ashish Kumar Bhutani, the joint secretary who signed the notification said: “Though he signed the notification, he is not directly working on the issue.” Aparna Deshpande, the assistant executive director at the Pesticides Manufacturers and Formulators Association of India (PMFAI) also refused to comment.
While the latest available data from the National Crime Records Bureau shows that nearly 24,000 people killed themselves using insecticides, a study by the Centre for Pesticide Suicide Prevention puts the number at 92,000. “A large proportion of pesticide suicides are impulsive, with a person contemplating suicide for less than 10 minutes. If a person is prevented from using a highly lethal method, they may use a method with lower lethality, with an increased chance of survival, or the suicidal impulse may pass,” reads their expert submission to Malhotra.
source ; FP
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Author Details
“Agrovista Profits” is a nonprofitable portal. A peer- Friend for the agriculture news, Agriculture News Blogs, agriculture research and development activities, Agriculture Business, etc ..... Agrovista Profits is an open-access Portal for opinion formers, decision makers, policy makers and farmers.Agricultural information that we will provide on the Portal “ Agrovista Profits “ will always remain clear, unbiased and factual accounts of development in, or affecting, world agriculture and food security. They will interpret the influence of related subjects (including Agriculture technology, Agriculture Business, Agriculture news climate, forestry, fisheries and, Agri - economics, Agri - ecology) on these developments. An important objective is to assist decision-makers to ensure policies and methods are evidence-based and sustainable.


No comments:
Post a Comment