Bayer faces Australian test with judge to decide whether weedkiller
caused cancer
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[January 30, 2024]
By Peter Hobson
CANBERRA (Reuters) - An Australian court on Tuesday heard closing
arguments in a class action lawsuit alleging that a weedkiller produced
by Bayer caused cancer, the first such case in Australia to reach this
stage.
Bayer has already paid billions of dollars to settle claims that
exposure to its glyphosate herbicide, Roundup, damaged health, in most
cases by causing non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a blood cancer.
The company faces more than 50,000 claims in the United States, with the
latest ruling requiring it to pay $2.25 billion to a single Pennsylvania
man and driving its share price down.
The Australian lawsuit is one of relatively few outside the United
States and is a test case for the country, where Roundup is widely used.
It is against subsidiaries of Bayer and brings together more than 1,000
claimants.
If the judge at the Federal Court in Victoria rules in the coming months
that Roundup caused lymphoma, the court will then consider whether Bayer
was negligent regarding the risks its products posed and should pay
damages.

Bayer says Roundup and glyphosate are safe. It said it "fully stands
behind its glyphosate-based products, which have been used around the
world for almost 50 years."
Damages are likely to be smaller than in the United States, a
spokesperson for Maurice Blackburn, the firm representing the claimants,
said. But a Maurice Blackburn lawyer has said each person should get a
"significant" sum.
The lead claimant is 41-year-old Kelvin McNickle, who says he used
Roundup to spray weeds for over two decades on his family's property and
while working for a vegetation management company. He developed lymphoma
aged 35.
His lymphoma recurred shortly before the trial began and he is currently
undergoing treatment, Maurice Blackburn said.
Four other cases have been filed in Australia. Three have been
permanently stayed by the Federal court and the fourth, another class
action, has been paused pending the outcome of the McNickle claim, Bayer
said.
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Bayer's Roundup is shown for sale in Encinitas, California, U.S.,
June 26, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
 MONSANTO
Roundup was originally produced by U.S. agrochemical company
Monsanto, which Bayer acquired for $63 billion in 2018.
The product has been under scrutiny since the World Health
Organization's cancer research agency concluded in 2015 that
glyphosate was probably carcinogenic to humans, though without
concluding whether it posed a risk in real world use.
Bayer agreed in 2020 to pay up to $9.6 billion to settle ongoing
Roundup lawsuits in the United States but did not get court approval
for an agreement to prevent future cases.
Bayer said in its most recent annual report that it faced 31
Canadian lawsuits relating to Roundup, including 11 seeking class
action certification. It did not mention any other claims outside
the United States.
The company has been phasing out sales of the household version of
Roundup but continues to sell glyphosate-based weedkillers to
farmers, who rely on it heavily.
Regulators including in the United States continue to allow Roundup
to be used, with the European Commission last year renewing
glyphosate's approval for another 10 years.
Bayer has a mixed record defending its product in U.S. courts,
winning 10 of the last 16 Roundup trials.
(Reporting by Peter Hobson; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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