Scant oversight,
corporate secrecy preceded U.S. weed killer crisis
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[August 09, 2017]
By Emily Flitter
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As the U.S. growing
season entered its peak this summer, farmers began posting startling
pictures on social media: fields of beans, peach orchards and vegetable
gardens withering away.
The photographs served as early warnings of a crisis that has damaged
millions of acres of farmland. New versions of the herbicide dicamba
developed by Monsanto and BASF, according to farmers, have drifted
across fields to crops unable to withstand it, a charge authorities are
investigating.
As the crisis intensifies, new details provided to Reuters by
independent researchers and regulators, and previously unreported
testimony by a company employee, demonstrate the unusual way Monsanto
introduced its product. The approach, in which Monsanto prevented key
independent testing of its product, went unchallenged by the
Environmental Protection Agency and nearly every state regulator.
Typically, when a company develops a new agricultural product, it
commissions its own tests and shares the results and data with
regulators. It also provides product samples to universities for
additional scrutiny. Regulators and university researchers then work
together to determine the safety of the product.
In this case, Monsanto denied requests by university researchers to
study its XtendiMax with VaporGrip for volatility - a measure of its
tendency to vaporize and drift across fields.
The researchers interviewed by Reuters - Jason Norsworthy at the
University of Arkansas, Kevin Bradley at the University of Missouri and
Aaron Hager at the University of Illinois - said Monsanto provided
samples of XtendiMax before it was approved by the EPA. However, the
samples came with contracts that explicitly forbade volatility testing.
"This is the first time I’m aware of any herbicide ever brought to
market for which there were strict guidelines on what you could and
could not do," Norsworthy said.
The researchers declined to provide Reuters a copy of the Monsanto
contracts, saying they were not authorized to do so.
Monsanto's Vice President of Global Strategy, Scott Partridge, said the
company prevented the testing because it was unnecessary. He said the
company believed the product was less volatile than a previous dicamba
formula that researchers found could be used safely.
"To get meaningful data takes a long, long time," he said. "This product
needed to get into the hands of growers."
'JEOPARDIZE THE FEDERAL LABEL'
Monsanto employee Boyd Carey, an agronomist, laid out the company's
rationale for blocking the independent research at a hearing of the
Arkansas Plant Board's Pesticide Committee in the summer of 2016.
A meeting summary by the Arkansas Legislature's Joint Budget Committee
described Carey’s testimony as follows: "Boyd Carey is on record on Aug.
8 stating that the University of Arkansas nor any other university was
given the opportunity to test VaporGrip in fear that the results may
jeopardize the federal label."
Efforts to reach Carey were not successful. Monsanto declined to comment
on his testimony.
To be sure, complaints about damaged crops are still under investigation
and there is no evidence that independent testing of XtendiMax’s
volatility would have altered the course of the crisis. But it would
have given regulators a more complete picture of the formula’s
properties as they decided if and how to let farmers use it, agriculture
experts said.
In the end, the EPA approved the product without the added testing in
September. It said it made its decision after reviewing company-supplied
data, including some measuring volatility.
"EPA’s analysis of the data has shown reduced volatility potential with
newer formulations," the EPA said in a July 27 statement.
However, EPA spokeswoman Amy Graham told Reuters the agency is "very
concerned about the recent reports of crop damage" and is reviewing
restrictions on dicamba labels.
Monsanto Chief Technology Officer Robert Fraley said, "We firmly believe
that our product if applied according to the instructions on the label
will not move off target and damage anyone."
[to top of second column] |
John Weiss looks over his crop of soybeans, which he had reported to
the state board for showing signs of damage due to the drifting of
Monsanto's pesticide Dicamba, at his farm in Dell, Arkansas, U.S.
July 25, 2017. REUTERS/Karen Pulfer Focht
STATES APPROVE WITHOUT MORE TESTING
Companies can limit independent testing because the substances are
proprietary. When samples are provided to researchers, lawyers hammer
out contracts detailing how testing will be conducted and results will
be handled, but rarely do agreements limit what the products can be
tested for, according to researchers interviewed by Reuters.
For instance, BASF, which introduced its rival herbicide, Engenia,
around the same time, said it allowed several university researchers to
evaluate its "off-target impact and application parameters."
Norsworthy, of the University of Arkansas, confirmed he had been
permitted by BASF to study Engenia for volatility and that the results
showed less volatility than previous dicamba formulations. BASF says its
product is safe when properly applied.
The EPA did not answer questions about whether it noticed a lack of
input from university researchers about XtendiMax’s volatility or
whether it requested such testing.
It also did not address whether the lack of independent research played
into its decision to give the product an abridged two-year registration,
less than the 20 years experts say is more common. The agency did the
same for BASF's Engenia.
"The EPA placed time limits on the registration to allow the agency to
either let it expire or to easily make the necessary changes in the
registration if there are problems," Graham, the EPA spokeswoman, said.
After the EPA signed off, Monsanto sought approval from individual
states, which determine whether agricultural products are suitable for
their climates and geographies.
To help them do that, Monsanto shared its XtendiMax testing results with
state regulators. But it only supplied that data in finished form,
Monsanto’s Carey told the Arkansas Plant Board meeting, meaning it
withheld underlying data that could be analyzed independently by the
regulators.
Only Arkansas wanted more. Terry Walker, the director of the Arkansas Plant
Board, said the state asked Monsanto for extra testing, but the company refused.
"As the system progressed and it got closer to EPA approval, the board kept
asking for local data," Walker said. "That did not happen."
Monsanto’s Fraley said the company could not honor Arkansas' request within the
EPA’s timeline. "Given the timing of the approval… there simply wasn’t the
opportunity to do the additional testing," he said.
Arkansas blocked Monsanto's product because of the lack of extra volatility
testing by universities, but approved BASF’s because it had not limited such
testing and the results were acceptable. Thirty-three other states - every other
state where the products were marketed - approved both products.
After Arkansas blocked XtendiMax in December, crop damage began to appear in the
state anyway. Investigators trying to determine the cause of the damage are
considering a range of possibilities including problems with or improper use of
Engenia or illegal use of XtendiMax or earlier formulations. In July, the state
banned all products containing dicamba.
Some states including Illinois, Missouri and Tennessee said they do not seek the
more data if products pass EPA scrutiny.
"The EPA is the federal agency responsible for approving and registering
pesticides for sale and use," said Missouri Department of Agriculture
spokeswoman Sarah Alsager. "The Department does not perform field testing or
solicit local input."
Some states are now forming task forces to determine what should be done about
the damage.
(Additional reporting by Steve Barnes in Little Rock, Arkansas; Editing by
Richard Valdmanis and Paul Thomasch)
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