Other EU countries have passed partial bans of glyphosate, developed
by Bayer-owned Monsanto, although France has lowered its ambitions
on a ban, highlighting its usefulness in agriculture. Austria has
embraced organic farming more than other EU member state.
"The scientific evidence of the plant poison's carcinogenic effect
is increasing. It is our responsibility to ban this poison from our
environment," the leader of Austria's Social Democrats, Pamela Rendi-Wagner,
said in a statement.
The far-right Freedom Party and liberal Neos party also backed the
bill. If the small upper house raises no objection, as appears
likely, the bill will become law once it is signed President
Alexander Van der Bellen, a former leader of the Greens, who have no
seats in parliament.
Glyphosate was developed by Monsanto under the brand Roundup. It is
now off-patent and marketed worldwide by dozens of other chemical
groups including Dow Agrosciences and Germany's BASF.
Concerns about its safety emerged when a World Health Organization
agency concluded in 2015 that it probably causes cancer. Bayer,
which acquired Monsanto last year, says studies and regulators have
deemed glyphosate and Roundup safe for human use. The company faces
lawsuits over claims the product causes non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Austria has the highest proportion of organic farmland in the
European Union - roughly 23%, far above the EU average of 7%,
according to EU data for 2017
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/
Organic_farming_statistics, and its pristine mountain landscapes are
one of its biggest tourist attractions.
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However, Austria's sustainability ministry, which is responsible for
farming and the environment, said it believed a ban would be
contrary to EU law because glyphosate is cleared for use in the bloc
until December 2022.
The conservative People's Party (OVP), which is traditionally
supported by many of the country's farmers and which controlled the
ministry for many years, made the same argument and opposed the
bill.
"It is pure populism," OVP lawmaker Klaus Lindinger said of the
legislation.
Austria is currently led by a provisional government of civil
servants ahead of a parliamentary election expected in September.
Political parties are forming shifting alliances to pass laws that
appeal to their voters before parliament goes into recess this week
until the election.
(Reporting by Francois Murphy and Alexandra Schwarz-Goerlich;
Additional reporting by Sybille de la Hamaide and Gus Trompiz in
Paris; Editing by Susan Fenton and Frances Kerry)
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