[ please forward widely ]
Weedkiller found in granola and crackers, internal
FDA emails show
The FDA has been testing food samples for traces of glyphosate
for two years,
but the agency has not yet released any official results
by Carey Gillam
Mon 30 Apr 2018, Guardian UK
More than 200m pounds of weedkiller are used annually by
US farmers on their fields.
It is sprayed directly over some crops, including corn, soybeans,
wheat and oats.
Photograph: Marvin Dembinsky Photo Associate/Alamy
US government scientists have detected a weedkiller linked to
cancer in an array of commonly consumed foods, emails obtained
through a freedom of information request show.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has been testing food
samples for residues of glyphosate, the active ingredient in
hundreds of widely used herbicide products, for two years, but has
not yet released any official results.
But the internal documents obtained by the Guardian show the FDA
has had trouble finding any food that does not carry traces of the
pesticide.
“I have brought wheat crackers, granola cereal and corn meal from
home and there’s a fair amount in all of them,” FDA chemist
Richard Thompson wrote to colleagues in an email last year
regarding glyphosate. Thompson, who is based in an FDA regional
laboratory in Arkansas, wrote that broccoli was the only food he
had “on hand” that he found to be glyphosate-free.
That internal FDA email, dated January 2017, is part of a string
of FDA communications that detail agency efforts to ascertain how
much of the popular weedkiller is showing up in American food. The
tests mark the agency’s first-ever such examination.
“People care about what contaminants are in their food. If there
is scientific information about these residues in the food, the
FDA should release it,” said Tracey Woodruff, a professor in the
University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. “It
helps people make informed decisions. Taxpayers paid for the
government to do this work, they should get to see the
information.”
The FDA is charged with annually testing food samples for
pesticide residues to monitor for illegally high residue levels.
The fact that the agency only recently started testing for
glyphosate, a chemical that has been used for over 40 years in
food production, has led to criticism from consumer groups and the
Government Accountability Office (GAO). Calls for testing grew
after the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
classified glyphosate as a probable human carcinogen in 2015.
Glyphosate is best known as the main ingredient in
Monsanto’s Roundup brand weedkiller.
Photograph: Rene van den Berg/Alamy Stock Photo
Glyphosate is best known as the main ingredient in Monsanto Co’s
Roundup brand. More than 200m pounds are used annually by US
farmers on their fields. The weedkiller is sprayed directly over
some crops, including corn, soybeans, wheat and oats. Many farmers
also use it on fields before the growing season, including spinach
growers and almond producers.
Thompson’s detection of glyphosate was made as he was validating
his analytical methods, meaning those residues will probably not
be included in any official report.
Separately, FDA chemist Narong Chamkasem found
“over-the-tolerance” levels of glyphosate in corn, detected at 6.5
parts per million, an FDA email states. The legal limit is 5.0
ppm. An illegal level would normally be reported to the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), but an FDA supervisor wrote
to an EPA official that the corn was not considered an “official
sample”.
When asked about the emails and the agency’s testing, an FDA
spokesman said only that the FDA had not found any illegal levels
in corn, soy, milk or eggs, the four commodities it considers part
of its glyphosate “special assignment”. He did not address the
unofficial findings revealed in the emails.
The FDA’s official findings should be released later this year or
early in 2019 as part of its 2016 annual residue report. The
reports typically are released two to two and a half years after
the data is collected.
Along with glyphosate, the agency has been trying to measure
residues of the herbicides 2,4-D and dicamba because of projected
increased use of these weedkillers on new genetically engineered
crops. The FDA spokesman said that the agency has “expanded
capacity” for testing foods for those herbicides this year.
Other findings detailed in the FDA documents show that in 2016
Chamkasem found glyphosate in numerous samples of honey. Chamkasem
also found glyphosate in oatmeal products. The FDA temporarily
suspended testing after those findings, and Chamkasem’s lab was
“reassigned to other programs”, the FDA documents show. The FDA
has said those tests were not part of its official glyphosate
residue assignment.
Pesticide exposure through diet is considered a potential health
risk. Regulators, Monsanto and agrochemical industry interests say
pesticide residues in food are not harmful if they are under legal
limits. But many scientists dispute that, saying prolonged dietary
exposure to combinations of pesticides can be harmful.
Toxicologist Linda Birnbaum, who is director of the US National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), said that
current regulatory analysis of pesticide dangers does not account
for low levels of dietary exposures.
“Even with low levels of pesticides, we’re exposed to so many and
we don’t count the fact that we have cumulative exposures,”
Birnbaum said.
The US Department of Agriculture was to start its own testing of
foods for glyphosate residues in 2017 but dropped the plan.
The lack of government residue data comes as Monsanto attempts to
bar evidence about glyphosate food residues from being introduced
in court where the company is fighting off allegations its Roundup
products cause cancer.
In a case set for trial on 18 June, San Francisco superior court
judge Curtis Karnow recently denied the company’s motion to keep
the jury from hearing about residues in food. The judge said that
although Monsanto worries the information “will inflame the jury
against Monsanto based on their own fear that they may have been
exposed”, such information “should not be excluded”.
Carey Gillam is a journalist and author, and a public interest
researcher for US Right to Know.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/apr/30/fda-weedkiller-glyphosate-in-food-internal-emails