Syngenta Responds To Activist Claims Regarding Atrazine
Released
on: January 18, 2010, 4:10 am
Author:
Syngenta
Industry: Environment,
Agriculture
• Backed by 6,000 studies and 50 years of use, atrazine can be
used safely
• Syngenta advocates transparent, scientific review of products
• Thousands of U.S. farmers rely on atrazine for safe, affordable and abundant food
production
For 50 years, sound science has governed U.S. regulatory decisions on atrazine, a
well-studied herbicide that farmers rely upon worldwide to produce safe, healthy and
abundant crops. Syngenta, as a science-based company, looks forward to a continuing,
open and transparent safety review of atrazine by the U.S. EPA in 2010 and expects a
positive outcome.
Last week, two environmental activist groups escalated their attacks on Syngenta and
atrazine, urging a departure from the EPA’s methodical, science-based approach to
regulating crop protection products such as atrazine. Syngenta believes these
claims are baseless and wrong.
These activist groups urge the removal of safe, regulated crop protection tools
farmers rely on to produce safe and abundant food for the world. It is estimated
forty percent of the world’s food supply would not exist without the use of such
products.
Committed to the highest ethical standards
“Syngenta is committed to promoting and maintaining high standards of corporate
responsibility worldwide in an industry that is essential to global agriculture and
food production,” said Dr. Tim Pastoor, principal scientist for Syngenta Crop
Protection. “The activist report is an irresponsible and defamatory
characterization of our company’s efforts to implement high standards of stewardship
for the safe, effective and environmentally responsible use of its products. Our
people are committed to the highest level of ethical standards in all our business
practices.”
Transparent review of the best science
EPA's 12-year evaluation completed in 2006 found atrazine poses "no harm that
would result to the general U.S. population, infants, children or other ...
consumers."
To reach its conclusion, EPA required that Syngenta initiate studies defined by the
EPA and conducted using internationally recognized Good Laboratory Practices.
“Syngenta is required by the EPA to conduct a long list of mandatory high-quality
studies under rigorous scrutiny by the agency,” said Pastoor. “Every data point is
available to verify the studies were done properly and the science can be verified
by EPA scientists. Recently cited studies by activist organizations are not
required to adhere to the same standards. The EPA’s recent evaluation reviewed the
best science in its regulatory decision, so these activist calls for yet another
review of atrazine would only be repeating the work that has been done already.”
World-renowned institutions including the World Health Organization, the National
Cancer Institute, and governments in Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom all
have studied atrazine. WHO said atrazine is deemed “not classifiable as to
carcinogenicity to humans,” placing it in the same cancer risk category as
substances such as tea, rubbing alcohol and talc. The Australian government said“it is unlikely that atrazine is an endocrine disruptor in humans."
In addition, Anne Lindsay, former Deputy Director, Office of Pesticide Programs,
U.S. EPA, in testimony before the Agriculture and Rural Development Committee of the
Minnesota House of Representatives, said "EPA has taken an especially close look at
the research conducted by Dr. Tyrone Hayes which reports that atrazine adversely
affects sexual development in frogs, causing a mixture of sex organs in a single
animal. EPA has concluded that the existing data are insufficient to demonstrate
that atrazine causes such effects. The Agency's conclusions are supported by the
independent, expert peer review of the SAP (Science Advisory Panel)."
Thousands of farmers rely on atrazine for more than half of U.S. corn
“Farmers have told us again and again to fight for atrazine, which is an important
tool in growing affordable and abundant food, and we will,” Pastoor said. “Atrazine
is relied on to control weeds on more than half of U.S. corn, and a 2003 EPA review
said ‘the total or national economic impact resulting from the loss of atrazine to
control grass and broadleaf weeds in corn, sorghum and sugar cane would be in excess
of $2 billion per year if atrazine were unavailable to growers.’ That would have a
devastating effect on our farm economy.”
For more information, visit www.atrazine.com.
About Syngenta:
Syngenta is one of the world's leading companies with more than 24,000 employees in
over 90 countries dedicated to our purpose: Bringing plant potential to life.
Through world-class science, global reach and commitment to our customers we help to
increase crop productivity, protect the environment and improve health and quality
of life. For more information about us please go to www.syngenta.com or
www.growmorefromless.com.
Related links:
www.atrazine.com
www.syngenta-us.com
www.syngentacropprotection.com
Contact Details: Sherry Duvall Ford
Syngenta Crop Protection
336-632-6107
sherry.ford@syngenta.com
PO Box 18300
Greensboro, NC 27419
www.syngenta-us.com