http://www.huffingtonpost.com/carey-gillam/epa-bows-to-
chemical-indu_b_12563438.html
EPA Bows to Chemical Industry in Delay of Glyphosate Cancer Review
 10/19/2016 04:13 pm ET

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<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/carey-gillam>
Carey Gillam  <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/carey-gillam>
<http://twitter.com/careygillam>Veteran journalist; Research Director for
U.S. Right to Know, a non-profit consumer education group

[image:
2016-10-19-1476907006-5487821-EnvironmentalProtectionAgency1280x960.jpg]
<http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2016-10-19-1476907006-5487821-EnvironmentalProtectionAgency1280x960.jpg>

This might have been a tough week for Monsanto Co. The Environmental
Protection Agency was slated to hold four days of public meetings focused
on essentially one question: Is glyphosate, the world’s most widely used
herbicide and the lynchpin to Monsanto’s fortunes, as safe as Monsanto has
spent 40 years telling us it is?

But oddly, the EPA Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) meetings, called to look
at potential glyphosate ties to cancer, were “postponed
<https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=EPA-HQ-OPP-2016-0385-0380>“ just
four days before they were to begin Oct. 18, after intense lobbying by the
agrichemical industry. The industry first fought to keep the meetings from
being held at all, and argued
<https://usrtk.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/CropLife-comment-SAP-08-24-16.pdf>
that
if they were held, several leading international experts should be excluded
from participating, including “any person who has publicly expressed an
opinion regarding the carcinogenicity of glyphosate.”

As the meetings drew near, CropLife America
<http://www.croplifeamerica.org/who-we-are/>, which represents the
interests of Monsanto and other agribusinesses, specifically took issue
with at least two scientists chosen for the panel, alleging the experts
might be unfavorably biased against industry interests. On Oct. 12, the
group sent a letter
<http://191hmt1pr08amfq62276etw2.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/CLA-Comments-on-SAP-Disqualification-10-12-16.pdf>
to
the EPA calling forDr. Kenneth Portier
<http://www.cancer.org/research/acsresearchers/kenneth-portier-phd> of the
American Cancer Society to be more deeply scrutinized for any “pre-formed
conclusions” about glyphosate.

More notably, CropLife called for leading epidemiologist Dr. Peter Infante
<https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-10/documents/fqpa_srb_panel_member_biosketches_oct_2016.pdf>
to
be completely disqualified from panel participation: “EPA should replace
Dr. Infante with an epidemiologist without such patent bias,” CropLife told
EPA. The chemical industry group said Infante was unlikely to give
industry-sponsored research studies the credibility the industry believes
they deserve. CropLife said Infante has testified in the past for
plaintiffs in chemical exposure cases against Monsanto. Croplife also
argued that because Infante was the “only epidemiologist on the glyphosate
SAP” he would have enhanced influence in the evaluation of epidemiological
data about glyphosate and cancer.

The CropLife letter was dated last Wednesday, and by Friday the EPA
announced it was looking for additional epidemiology expertise to ensure
“robust representation from that discipline.” EPA also said one panelist
had voluntarily departed, though the agency refused to say who that
panelist was.

Challenging Infante’s role is a gutsy move. After all, Infante spent 24
years working for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration helping
determine cancer risks to workers during the development of standards toxic
substances, including asbestos, arsenic, and formaldehyde. His resume
includes a stint at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health where he conducted epidemiological studies related to carcinogens,
and he has served as an expert consultant in epidemiology for several world
bodies, including the EPA and the World Trade Organization.

According to sources close to the situation, Infante remains a panelist as
of this week, but there is no certainty when the meetings might be
rescheduled, and what the panel membership might look like when they are
rescheduled. The EPA has refused to discuss who remains on the panel and
who does not at this point, and some onlookers said the EPA was clearly
bowing to agrichemical industry interests.

“This is outrageous. The industry wants to say that our own government
scientists, the top ones in their fields, aren’t good enough for these
panels,” said Michael Hansen, senior staff scientist at the Consumers
Union. “If the EPA wants to add extra epidemiologists that is great but why
didn’t they do it before? They are doing this because of pressure from
industry.”

The industry clearly has much at stake, as does the public. Glyphosate is
the key ingredient in Monsanto’s branded Roundup herbicides as well as
herbicides marketed by numerous agrichemical companies around the world. It
is also the key to what has been 20 years of sales of genetically
engineered glyphosate-tolerant crops developed by Monsanto. The future
sales of both the chemical and the crops are being jeopardized by the
mounting concerns that glyphosate can cause cancer and other illnesses or
disease. Scientists around the world have been raising red flags for years
over worrisome research findings, and last year the International Agency
for Research on Cancer (IARC), said glyphosate was aprobable human
carcinogen. <http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/Monographs/vol112/mono112-09.pdf>
More
than three dozen lawsuits
<https://www.schmidtlaw.com/roundup-lawsuits-centralized-in-mdl-in-northern-california/>have
been filed against Monsanto by people claiming Roundup gave them
non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and both European and U.S. regulators are evaluating
the chemical for continued use.

Since the IARC classification, Monsanto has asked the EPA to back industry
assurances that glyphosate is safe, and so far, the EPA has done exactly
that, issuing a series of reports and memos that dovetail with Monsanto’s
position. Monsanto also has sought to bolster arguments for glyphosate’s
safety by pointing to supportive research papers
<http://www.tandfonline.com/action/doSearch?AllField=Glyphosate&SeriesKey=itxc20&startPage=&sortBy=Ppub>
published
in late September in Critical Reviews in Toxicology. Monsanto hired the
group that arranged for the panel, and most of the 16 scientists involved
are former Monsanto employees or Monsanto consultants. At least one, Gary
Williams, has also consulted for Monsanto on litigation matters involving
glyphosate. Despite all those affiliations, the research is touted as
“independent.”

It seems more than a little hypocritical that those scientists are
presented as credible by the industry, but scientists like Infante and
Portier are said to be unfit to advise EPA because of suspected bias. Like
Infante, Portier has a long track record as an independent scientist. He is
vice president of the Statistics & Evaluation Center at the American Cancer
Society. He has participated in over 60 other SAP meetings and has served
on expert and advisory panels for the National Institutes of Health,
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, the National
Toxicology Program, and the World Health Organization Food and Agriculture
Organization.

Portier also would not comment about the industry concerns about him, the
postponement or changes to the makeup of the SAP, other than to say that as
of today, he remains on the panel.

EPA said it is “working to reschedule as soon as possible.” But the delay
and the maneuvering by industry to influence panel participation does
little bolster consumer confidence in an objective outcome.
Follow Carey Gillam on Twitter: www.twitter.com/careygillam
Michael Hansen, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist
Consumers Union
101 Truman Ave.
Yonkers, NY 10703
o: 914-378-2452
c: 917-774-3801

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