Monsanto
wins support from 11 U.S. states in California cancer
dispute
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[January 04, 2018] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Monsanto Co has won
support from eleven U.S. states in its attempt to stop California from
requiring cancer warnings on products containing glyphosate, ratcheting
up a legal fight over the company's popular weed killer.
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Missouri, home to Monsanto's headquarters, along with other farm
states including Iowa and Indiana, said in court documents on
Tuesday that the warnings would be misleading because there is no
definite link between glyphosate and cancer.
Midwest businesses would need to include warnings on glyphosate
products if California requires them or stop selling such goods
because they may end up in the Golden State, according to the
states' filing.
California added glyphosate, the main ingredient in Monsanto’s
Roundup herbicide, to its list of cancer-causing chemicals in July
2017 and will require products containing the chemical to carry
warnings by July 2018.
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The state acted after the World Health Organization's International
Agency for Research on Cancer concluded in 2015 that glyphosate was
"probably carcinogenic."
"The mandate imposes confusing and potentially inconsistent
obligations on non-resident businesses, creating a strong incentive
to abandon glyphosate markets altogether," the states' filing said.
For more than 40 years, farmers have applied glyphosate to crops,
most recently on soybeans that Monsanto genetically engineered to
resist the herbicide. Roundup is also sprayed on residential lawns
and golf courses.
The controversy in California is a headache for the company as it
faces a crisis around another herbicide based on a chemical known as
dicamba that has been linked to U.S. crop damage.
Monsanto, which is being acquired by Bayer AG for $63.5 billion,
developed the dicamba-based product following an increase in weeds
resistant to glyphosate.
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The 11 states are supporting a federal lawsuit Monsanto, the
National Association of Wheat Growers and other agricultural groups
filed in November to stop the state from requiring glyphosate
warnings.
Monsanto said Wednesday it had discussed California's mandate with
officials in agricultural states as it proceeded with the lawsuit.
California's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA),
which is named in the lawsuit, declined to comment. The office
previously said it stands by the decision to include glyphosate on
the state's list of products known to cause cancer, as required
under a rule known as Proposition 65.
"Proposition 65 is 30 years old and for every one of those years
there have been strenuous attempts to kill it on the ground that
it's different from other states," said David Roe, the rule's
primary author.
"They've always failed."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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