French farmer wins $11,700 in Bayer pesticide fumes case
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[December 08, 2022]
PARIS (Reuters) - Germany's Bayer has been ordered to pay
compensation of 11,135 euros ($11,700) to a French farmer who inhaled
fumes from a weedkiller, ending a 15-year legal battle.
The French case had added to health claims against the crop chemical and
pharmaceutical group, which is facing thousands of cases in the United
States over another weedkiller.
Farmer Paul Francois and anti-pesticide groups supporting his campaign
expressed disappointment over the sum as they try to show a wider trend
of illness caused by farm chemicals.
"11,000 euros for so much sacrifice," Francois told franceinfo radio
after a French court ordered the award.
His lawyer told Reuters the exact amount was 11,135 euros.
The crop farmer argued that the fumes he inhaled in 2004 from the
weedkiller Lasso, a product subsequently withdrawn from the French
market, caused neurological problems, including memory loss, fainting
and headaches.
After a court ruled in 2019 that Monsanto, which had meanwhile become a
subsidiary of Bayer, was liable for providing inadequate safety
information on Lasso, France's highest court in 2020 rejected a final
company appeal, opening the way for another court to decide on damages.
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The logo of Bayer Mexico is pictured at
the company's plant in Lerma, Mexico November 10, 2022.
REUTERS/Henry Romero
Bayer France said in a statement
that the sum awarded was less than 1% of what Francois had demanded,
which was in line with media reports that the farmer had asked for
more than 1 million euros in compensation.
The company reiterated that judicial experts had not recognised any
of the "serious pathologies" alleged.
"This type of ruling could discourage pesticide victims from
claiming the responsibility of multinational firms," a group of
anti-pesticide associations said in a statement.
Bayer inherited the French legal claim after acquiring U.S.-based
Monsanto, whose takeover also landed it with a portfolio of
litigation relating to Roundup, another weedkiller.
The group has been challenging the lawsuits seeking tens of millions
of dollars in awards. Plaintiffs claim that Roundup's active
ingredient glyphosate caused cancer and other diseases.
($1 = 0.9517 euros)
(Reporting by Tassilo Hummel and Gus Trompiz; editing by Silvia
Aloisi, Jason Neely, Crispian Balmer and Alexander Smith)
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