http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/story.jsp?story=425893

Bush ready to wreck ozone layer treaty US slips in demand to drop ban on
harmful pesticide By Geoffrey Lean, Environment Editor 
20 July 2003


President George Bush is targeting the international treaty to save the
ozone layer which protects all life on earth from deadly radiation, The
Independent on Sunday can reveal.

New US demands - tabled at a little-noticed meeting in Montreal earlier
this month - threaten to unravel one of the greatest environmental
success stories of the past few decades, causing millions of deaths from
cancer.

The news comes at a particularly embarrassing time for the Prime
Minister, Tony Blair, who pressed the President in their talks in
Washington last week to stop his attempts to sabotage the Kyoto Protocol
which sets out to control global warming: one of the few international
issues on which they differ.

Now, instead of heeding Mr Blair, Mr Bush is undermining the ozone treaty
as well, by seeking to perpetuate the use of the most ozone-destructive
chemical still employed in developed countries, otherwise soon to be
phased out. Ironically, it was sustained pressure from the Reagan
administration, in which Mr Bush's father served as vice-president, that
ensured the treaty was adopted in the first place. It has proved such a
success that environmentalists have long regarded it as inviolable.

The ozone layer - made of a type of oxygen so thinly scattered through
the upper atmosphere that, if gathered all together, it would form a ring
around the earth no thicker than the sole of a shoe - screens out the
sun's harmful ultraviolet rays which would, otherwise, wipe out
terrestrial life. As it weakens, more of the rays get through, causing
skin cancer and blindness from cataracts.

The world was shocked to discover in the 1980s that pollution from
man-made chemicals had opened a hole the size of the United States in the
layer above Antarctica, and had thinned it worldwide. Led by the US,
nations moved with unprecedented speed to agree the treaty, called the
Montreal Protocol, in 1987 - which started the process of phasing out use
of the chemicals.

The measures have been progressively tightened ever since. Scientists
reckon that they will eventually prevent 2 million cases of cancer a year
in the US and Europe alone. But President Bush's new demands threaten to
throw the process into reverse.

They centre on a pesticide, methyl bromide, now the greatest attacker of
ozone left in industrialised countries. The US is responsible for a
quarter of the world's consumption of the chemical, which has also been
linked with increased prostate cancers in farmers.

Under an extension to the Montreal Protocol, agreed in 1997, the
pesticide is being gradually phased out and replaced with substitutes;
its use in the West is due to end completely in 2005. Nations are legally
allowed to extend the use of small amounts in "critical" applications,
but the US is demanding exemptions far beyond those permitted, for uses
ranging from growing strawberries to tending golf courses.

It is also pressing to exploit a loophole in the treaty - allowing the
use of the chemical to treat wood packaging - so that, instead of being
phased out, its use would increase threefold.

The demands now go to an international conference in Nairobi this autumn.
Experts fear that, if agreed, the treaty will begin to fall apart, not
least because developing countries - which are following rich nations in
phasing out ozone-depleting chemicals - could cease their efforts.

"The US is reneging on the agreement, and working very, very hard to get
other countries to agree," said David Doniger, a former senior US
government official dealing with ozone issues, who now works for the
Natural Resources Defense Council. "If it succeeds, it threatens to
unravel the whole fabric of the treaty."

Dr Joe Farman, the Cambridge scientist who discovered the Antarctic ozone
hole, added: "This is madness. We do not need this chemical. We do need
the ozone layer. How stupid can people be?" 

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