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Mascagni reports: "While the media has highlighted the widespread use of
highly hazardous chemicals in India and subsequent health effects,
what's largely unreported is the role that the United States has played
- and continues to play - in the tragic but preventable deaths from
monocrotophos around the world."

  [A farmer sprays pesticide containing monocrotophos at Mohanpur
village, about 28 miles west of Agartala, the capital of India's
northeastern state of Tripura, 07/25/13. (photo: Reuters/Jayanta Dey)]
A farmer sprays pesticide containing monocrotophos at Mohanpur village,
about 28 miles west of Agartala, the capital of India's northeastern
state of Tripura, 07/25/13. (photo: Reuters/Jayanta Dey)

  [go to original article] 
<http://www.salon.com/2013/08/09/thanks_for_pesticides_america/>

Thanks for the Pesticides, America!
By Evan Mascagni, Salon

11 August 13



fter eating a school lunch that was made with cooking oil tainted with
the toxic pesticide monocrotophos, 23 Indian children were recently
killed. While themedia has highlighted the widespread use of highly
hazardous chemicals
<http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/bihar-school-deaths-highlight\
-indias-struggle-with-pesticides/?_r=1>  in India and subsequent health
effects, what's largely unreported isthe role that the United States
has played — and continues to play — in the tragic but
preventable deaths from monocrotophos around the world.

Monocrotophos is an organophosphorus insecticide developed
<http://www.pan-uk.org/pestnews/Actives/monocrot.htm>  by Ciba-Geigy
(now Novartis) and first registered for use in the United States in
1965.Shortly thereafter, it was discovered to be extremely toxic, and
was linked
<http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/07/india-dead-children-and-a-dan\
gerous-pesticide/>  to massive bee die-offs, thousands of bird deaths
and extreme risks to human health and the environment. This ultimately
led the Environmental Protection Agency to restrictand eventually banits
use in 1989 <http://www.fao.org/docrep/w5715e/w5715e04.htm> .

But, even though monocrotophos was prohibited for use domestically,
corporations were permitted to continue making the chemical for export
only. In fact, in the five years after this insecticide was banned in
the U.S., more than 1 million pounds were exported from U.S. ports
<http://fasenet.org/pesticide.html> , often arriving in some of the
poorest countries in the world. This practice was and continues to be
allowed under the federal law
<http://www.epa.gov/oppfead1/international/trade/>  that states,
"pesticides that are not approved — or registered — for use
in the U.S. may be manufactured in the U.S. and exported."

In what became the ultimate irony, after the U.S. banned monocrotophos
but continued to export it, traces of the chemical were found on produce
imported back into the country. The U.S. General Accounting Office
examined results of tests on imported produce for traces of unregistered
pesticides between 1989-91, and monocrotophos accounted for 69 of the 88
violations
<http://www.abcbirds.org/abcprograms/policy/toxins/profiles/monocrotopho\
s.html>  it discovered.This finding completed what David Weir and Mark
Schapiro originally called
<http://books.google.com/books/about/Circle_of_Poison.html?id=Ho4ZiTa2fR\
QC>  the "Circle of Poison,"in which banned pesticides first
harm American workers who help produce them for export, then travel
abroad where they are routinely sprayed on workers in the fields and
nearby communities, and ultimately return to the U.S. on imported food.

Fast forward to 2013, where under current U.S. law it is still perfectly
legal for a company to manufacture monocrotophos for export only. While
current export data is difficult and costly to obtain and analyze, we do
know that for some reason monocrotophos continues to be imported to the
United States, but not for domestic use. In general, pesticides not
approved for use in the United States are not allowed to be imported for
use in the United States, but if that pesticide is coming into the U.S.
for the sole purpose of formulation or packaging for export, its arrival
is permitted <http://www.epa.gov/PR_Notices/pr99-1.html> . Whether
it's for formulation, packaging or just a pit stop before ultimately
landing somewhere else in the world, U.S. Customs and Census import data
<http://www.census.gov/econ/overview/mt0100.html>  for 2013 shows that
monocrotophos continues to be imported to the United States.

The deaths of the 23 Indian schoolchildren happened more than twenty
years after the pesticide's ban in the United States. It's time
to reexamine our archaic export laws on chemicals not approved for use
in the United States. Until we do so, we remain a crucial player in
continuing the circle of poison.

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