https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/25/dining/ben-and-jerrys-
ice-cream-herbicide-glyphosate.html?hpw&rref=food&
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Traces of Controversial Herbicide Are Found in Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream

By STEPHANIE STROM <https://www.nytimes.com/by/stephanie-strom>JULY 25, 2017


A growing number of foods commonly found in kitchens across America have
tested positive for glyphosate, the herbicide that is the main ingredient
in the popular consumer pesticide Roundup, which is widely used in
agriculture. But few brands on that list are as startling as the latest:
Ben & Jerry’s, the Vermont ice cream company known for its family-friendly
image and environmental advocacy.

The Organic Consumers Association announced Tuesday that it found traces of
glyphosate in 10 of 11 samples of the company’s ice creams — although at
levels far below the ceiling set by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Rob Michalak, global director of social mission at Ben & Jerry’s, said the
company was working to ensure that all the ingredients in its supply chain
come from sources that do not include genetically modified organisms, known
as G.M.O.s. None of its plant-based ingredients, for instance, come
from a genetically
engineered crop
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/g/genetically_modified_food/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
like
corn or soy, where glyphosate is used in production. The company is also
trying to figure out a cost-effective way for the dairy farms that supply
its milk to use non-G.M.O. feed.

“We’re working to transition away from G.M.O., as far away as we can get,”
Mr. Michalak said. “But then these tests come along, and we need to better
understand where the glyphosate they’re finding is coming from. Maybe it’s
from something that’s not even in our supply chain, and so we’re missing
it.”

Consumer groups around the country, including the Organic Consumers
Association, have begun raising awareness of glyphosate in food, because
some studies have linked it to a variety of diseases. The International
Agency for Research on Cancer, a unit of the World Health
Organization, declared
this year
<https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/28/business/energy-environment/decades-after-monsantos-roundup-gets-an-all-clear-a-cancer-agency-raises-concerns.html?_r=0>
that
it “probably” could cause some cancers. The agency reviewed scientific
studies involving people, laboratory animals and cells to assess whether
glyphosate might cause cancer.

Monsanto and other companies that make products containing glyphosate hotly
dispute those studies and say there is no reason for concern. Government
and other regulators tend to agree that very low levels are not harmful to
humans.

Ronnie Cummins, a founder and the international director of the Organic
Consumers Association, said the amount found in Ben & Jerry’s ice cream
would not violate any regulations. “Not everyone agrees with the acceptable
levels governments have set,” Mr. Cummins said. “And, anyway, would you
want to be eating this stuff at all?”

It’s far from clear. Divergent findings over glyphosate’s impact on health
have divided governments, scientists, regulators and even the World Health
Organization, with its International Agency for Research on Cancer linking
it to cancer and another unit of the organization insisting on its safety.

Here is what we know:

• The levels of glyphosate found in Ben & Jerry’s ice creams are, indeed,
small, according to government regulators and the scientist who did the
testing.

Among the flavors tested, Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate Fudge Brownie showed the
highest levels of glyphosate, with 1.74 parts per billion, and glyphosate’s
byproduct aminomethylphosphonic acid registering 0.91 parts per billion.
The Test Results

The amounts of glyphosate (the herbicide used in Roundup) found in a pint
of each flavor of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, in parts per billion.

Cherry Garcia

No detectable glyphosate

Vanilla

(2 samples tested)

0.05 to 0.25

Half Baked

0.05 to 0.25

Americone Dream

0.05 to 0.25

Chocolate Chip

Cookie Dough

0.05 to 0.25

Phish Food

0.42

The Tonight Dough

0.42

Peanut Butter Cup

0.57

Peanut Butter Cookie

0.91

Chocolate Fudge

Brownie

1.74
The Organic Consumers Association

Such amounts might seem negligible. John Fagan, the chief executive of the
Health Research Institute Laboratories, which did the testing for the
Organic Consumers Association, calculated that a 75-pound child would have
to consume 145,000 eight-ounce servings a day of Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate
Fudge Brownie ice cream to hit the limit set by the Environmental
Protection Agency, the government body charged with setting a ceiling on
the amount of glyphosate allowed in food.

An adult would have to eat 290,000 servings to hit the agency’s cutoff, Dr.
Fagan said.

Even European regulatory limits for glyphosate consumption, which are
almost six times lower than limits in the United States, find that a child
would have to eat 25,000 servings a day and an adult 50,000 for the
herbicide to pose a threat.

“Based on these government thresholds, the levels found in Ben & Jerry’s
Chocolate Fudge Brownie ice cream would seem totally irrelevant,” he said.

• But recent research suggests that the glyphosate levels still might be
 significant. In research <http://www.nature.com/articles/srep39328> published
this year in Scientific Reports, a journal from the publishers of Nature,
rats that consumed very low doses of glyphosate each day showed early signs
of fatty liver disease within three months, which worsened over time.

In that study, conducted by a group of scientists at King’s College London
and led by Michael Antoniou, a molecular biologist, the rats consumed in a
day an amount of glyphosate equivalent to a child’s portion of Ben &
Jerry’s Chocolate Fudge Brownie ice cream, Dr. Fagan said.

Monsanto, the largest seller of products containing glyphosate, labeled the
research
<http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/01/study-linking-herbicide-disease-fuels-debate-170116140401709.html>
“bad
science” and the rehashing of a study done five years earlier. Some
scientists criticized the more recent study for failing to disclose the age
of the rats, which could affect outcomes, and for using a breed prone to
tumors.

“There were a number of criticisms of that study that were absolutely not
true,” said David Schubert, a professor at the Salk Institute for
Biological Studies who works on neurodegenerative diseases. “But the
industry does what it can to make the science very confusing to a
layperson.”

Dr. Schubert pointed to a study
<http://www.cell.com/cell-chemical-biology/abstract/S2451-9456(16)30474-3> in
the journal Cell Chemical Biology that came out shortly after the one led
by Dr. Antoniou, which found that when a body processes glyphosate, one of
the herbicide’s byproducts interfered with the body’s ability to break down
fatty acids. The accumulation of fatty acids is a signature of fatty liver
disease.

“It basically confirms what Antoniou showed in his research,” Dr. Schubert
said.

• One of the consumer groups pointing at Ben & Jerry’s may have a larger
motive.

The Organic Consumers Association has been working with an organization
called Regeneration Vermont to persuade Ben & Jerry’s to go organic.
Federal regulations governing organic agriculture prohibit the use of
glyphosate.

To make its point, the association also had the Health Research Institute
test four organic brands of vanilla ice cream — Alden’s, Three Twins,
Julie’s and the Whole Foods Market brand 365. The lab found 0.25 to 0.5
parts per billion of glyphosate’s byproduct, aminomethylphosphonic acid, in
the 365 sample, but no detectable traces of glyphosate or its byproduct in
the other samples.

“If they went organic, they wouldn’t have this problem,” said Will Allen, a
founder of Regeneration Vermont and an organic farmer who has met with Ben
& Jerry’s executives.

Other groups testing for glyphosate
<https://s3.amazonaws.com/media.fooddemocracynow.org/images/FDN_Glyphosate_FoodTesting_Report_p2016.pdf>
have
found it in Quaker Oats, Cheerios, Ritz Crackers and Stacy’s Simply Naked
Pita Chips, among a range of other products. The companies behind those
products have all noted that the glyphosate amounts fell well below
regulatory limits.

Many of those products have few or no ingredients derived from genetically
engineered crops like corn, soy and sugar beets, which are meant to
withstand glyphosate. Some of those products have nonetheless tested for
glyphosate registered at much higher levels than those found in Ben &
Jerry’s ice creams.

Both Mr. Cummins, of the Organic Consumers Association, and Mr. Michalak,
of Ben & Jerry’s, said the glyphosate found in Ben & Jerry’s probably comes
from add-ins like peanut butter and cookie dough. Such products contain
ingredients like wheat, oats and peanuts that are often sprayed with the
herbicide to dry them out.

• Regardless, this may be only the beginning for consumer brands, which will
face increasing scrutiny over glyphosate.

For the past few years, consumer and environmental groups have started
testing for glyphosate in food, because, while the government routinely
tests foods
<https://www.fda.gov/food/foodborneillnesscontaminants/pesticides/ucm2006797.htm>
for
a variety of pesticides, it does not regularly test for glyphosate.

In 2011, the Agriculture Department conducted a special test of 300 soybean
samples for glyphosate and found the herbicide in 271 of them, according to
Carey Gillam, the author of “Whitew
<https://islandpress.org/book/whitewash>ash:
The Story of a Weed Killer, Cancer, and the Corruption of Science
<https://islandpress.org/book/whitewash>,” a book about glyphosate that
will go on sale in October.

“Regulators have turned a blind eye toward trying to figure out what levels
of glyphosate are in our food supply,” Ms. Gillam said.

The Agriculture Department did not respond to a request for comment.

The Food and Drug Administration is responsible for enforcing maximum
pesticide residue levels for any foods in interstate commerce, and it issues
an annual report
<https://www.fda.gov/food/foodborneillnesscontaminants/pesticides/ucm2006797.htm>
on
pesticide residue found in food — with the exception of glyphosate.

Megan McSeveney, a spokeswoman for the agency, said the methods used in its
annual tests cannot detect glyphosate because of its chemical makeup and
how it degrades. Available methods of testing, she added, are costly and
labor intensive. In 2014, after the Government Accountability Office sharply
criticized <https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-15-38> the agency for failing
to test for glyphosate — and also for not disclosing that fact to the
public — the Food and Drug Administration said it would cost about $5
million to start such testing.

The agency, Ms. McSeveney said, planned to test four food commodities —
corn, soy, eggs and milk — although she could not say when such testing
would begin.

Some food and commodity companies have decided they can’t wait on the
government. The Scoular Company, which sells grains and other commodities,
has begun requiring farmers who sell the company soybeans and corn to
notify it before using any defoliants, including glyphosate.

142COMMENTS

“We are concerned about the general increase in chemical residues in
foods,” said Greg Lickteig, a director at Scoular, “and some of our
customers are concerned, too. That’s just the way it is. We now have the
ability to know what’s in our food more than we ever have before.”

*Follow NYT Food on Facebook <https://www.facebook.com/nytfood/>, Instagram
<https://instagram.com/nytfood>, Twitter
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with recipe suggestions, cooking tips and shopping advice
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Correction: July 25, 2017

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated
the name of the lab that tested the ice cream for the Organic Consumers
Association. It is Health Research Institute Laboratories, not Health
Resource Institute Laboratories.
Correction: July 25, 2017

An earlier version of this article misstated the name of a journal that
published a study led by Dr. Michael Antoniou. The study was published in
Scientific Reports, a journal from the publishers of Nature, not in Nature.

Michael Hansen, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist
Consumers Union
101 Truman Ave.
Yonkers, NY 10703
o: 914-378-2452 <(914)%20378-2452>
c: 917-774-3801 <(917)%20774-3801>

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