Pesticides: Why Not

CHEMICAL PESTICIDE USE AT CURRENT LEVELS IS NEITHER SAFE NOR SUSTAINABLE!

CHEMICAL PESTICIDE USE is widespread, not only in agriculture ('plant protection products') but also in a variety of industries, including health protection and textile, furniture and cosmetics production (biocides)

THE PUBLIC'S RIGHT TO KNOW WHICH POISON'S ARE PRESENT IN THE PRODUCTS AND FOODSTUFFS THEY USE IS NOT HONOURED IN PRACTICE

WARNINGS OF POSSIBLE ADVERSE EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL PESTICIDES ON THE ENVIRONMENT AND HUMAN HEALTH ARE WHOLLY INADEQUATE

PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO CHOOSE PESTICIDE-FREE ALTERNATIVES HAS BEEN UNDERMINED

FLAWED SAFEGUARDS:

APPROVALS & RENEWALS are granted on the basis of unpublished industry-funded 'safety' studies.

INDEPENDENT STUDIES published in peer-reviewed journals are not taken into account.

EXTENSIONS OF APPROVALS for a year or more are often granted automatically.

PROVISIONAL APPROVALS may be granted for pesticides which are still under assessment.

CANDIDATES FOR SUBSTITUTION are pesticides which are known to be highly dangerous to health, but which are still allowed until an alternative is manufactured.

'SAFETY LEVELS' of dangerous chemical pesticide residues in foods (Maximum Residual Levels - MRLs) are purely theoretical and are based on single substances, not the combinations which are most often present.

TESTING FOR 'SAFETY' involves the unacceptable torture of hundreds of different animals.

BANS of dangerous pesticides take years to establish and are not enforced immediately.

DEROGATIONS can be used to circumvent bans.

RISKS TO BEES, OTHER POLLINATORS AND BIRDS are not included in the numerous primary hazard warnings which are part of pesticide labelling in the EU.

SUPPOSED BENEFITS of pesticide products are heavily promoted by manufacturers and law-givers, also many governments, regional and local authorities, health authorities, agronomists as well as sellers of the end products.

PESTICIDE USERS are not properly informed or educated about the dangers inherent in pesticides.

MAJOR AGRI-CHEMICAL COMPANIES ruthlessly oppose any attempts to reduce pesticide use in the world.

ALTERNATIVES TO CHEMICAL PESTICIDES in agriculture are not promoted to farmers or gardeners on any realistic level.

PESTICIDE LEVELS IN HUMANS and their possible association with ill-health have not been systematically investigated.

For details of the problems relating to chemical pesticides, please see our articles:

Vivian Grisogono MA(Oxon) June 2023.

You are here: Home poisons be aware Pesticides: Why Not

Eco Environment News feeds

  • Millions in France and across Europe are enduring extreme heat; ‘London is cooking,’ says UN secretary general

    Italy’s health ministry has declared a red heatwave alert in 15 cities including Milan and Rome on Tuesday and said the number would go up to 16 on Wednesday.

    During a red alert – the highest level – the ministry advises people to eat light, stay indoors in the hottest parts of the day and sprinkle themselves with cool water.

    Continue reading...

  • As hot weather becomes more common, companies and homeowners are coming up with innovative ways to keep properties cool

    When graphic designer Marc Alabaster had a new set of glass doors installed at his West Sussex home eight years ago, he soon realised how they magnified the heat of the afternoon sun.

    “The kitchen was 40-plus degrees,” he said. Then he went on holiday to Spain and saw an apartment building wrapped in louvre-like rows of angled fins or blades that shaded the external walls against the sun.

    Continue reading...

  • Half a century on, Britain braces for temperatures up to 40C as global heating brings yet more extreme weather

    The summer of 1976 is seared into national memory as one of record heat. Harvests failed, farmers despaired, Britain imported an extra million tonnes of grain, food prices rose by 12%, taps ran dry, and each day, 250 people died from heat-related deaths.

    The heatwave, which began 50 years ago on Tuesday, brought 15 consecutive days on which the peak temperature was above 32C. Half a century later and 32C no longer feels shocking.

    Continue reading...

  • Researchers say it is ‘quite wild’ to see fires at such high northern latitudes happen so early in the year

    Scientists have expressed concern after two wildfires broke out within a week of each other on the Arctic island of Greenland earlier this month.

    Fires were burning close to Sisimiut, Greenland’s second largest town and a popular tourism centre, on 14 and 15 June, satellite imagery has shown, while a second blaze hit Kujalleq, on the island’s southern tip, on 17 June.

    Continue reading...

  • The cost of the traditional takeaway has doubled since 2019, and more outlets are trying to tempt customers with cheaper options such as coley, pollack and hake

    In late April, visitors to Harbour Lights in Falmouth, Cornwall, may have raised an eyebrow. The fish and chip shop was in the midst of a “cod-free week”, its owners having removed cod from its menu entirely.

    It was the second time owner Pete Fraser had undertaken the experiment, 15 years after the first. He also removed cod from his shops in Penzance and Helston, replacing it with coley, pollack, hake and hoki. The result was very different. “Some of the feedback we had, which certainly wasn’t what we got when we ran it years ago, is ‘Can you repeat this?’ Before, it was like, ‘Have you guys lost your head’?”

    Continue reading...

  • Energy secretary hails £100bn milestone in this parliament and says it is ‘only the start of what we want to achieve’

    Ed Miliband has hailed a boost to UK jobs and growth as government data reveals that private sector companies have pledged more than £100bn in investment into the green economy so far in this parliament.

    Offshore wind, solar power and the electricity grid make up the bulk of the planned investment, most of it between 2024 and 2031, which will go to all regions of the UK and comes from a mixture of UK companies and overseas sources including the EU and Japan.

    Continue reading...

  • The country’s biggest tree – named Heaven Sword of the Da’an River – is a carbon-storing behemoth hosting whole neighbourhoods of wildlife. But this and other giant trees are under threat

    The higher you climb up the gigantic, millennia-old trees of Taiwan’s forests, the more layers of habitat and life emerge. On the forest floor, ferns thrive in the moist shade. Flying squirrels and owls sleep inside the hollow tree trunks. Yellow bell-shaped rhododendron flowers spring from the lower tree canopy. Higher still, dense lichen spread. Up in cloud-drenched branches, a rare, hardy orchid, Bulbophyllum ciliisepalum, can be spotted.

    “In one tree, every species has their preferred location,” says Dr Rebecca Hsu, assistant researcher at the Taiwan Forestry Research Institute. “Every metre the temperature, the wind, the sun, the light is different.”

    Continue reading...

  • In HBO documentary The Welcome Table, director Josh Fox brings together people from across the world whose lives have been dramatically altered by the climate crisis

    In an age of division, director Josh Fox is hoping to bring people of all kinds together. Specifically, he wants them to share a table – to break bread for a meal, and come together in exuberant song.

    In his new documentary film The Welcome Table, the director of the the Emmy-winning Gasland travels around the world to talk to people at the leading edge of global warming’s effects. The film is part stark warning of the climate crisis, part opportunity to enter into the experience of those living in the corners of the globe. It culminates with the sounds of these individuals together at an enormous table in New Orleans, eating and rejoicing.

    Continue reading...

  • The colour-coordinated ‘clean girl’ athleisure aesthetic is dead. Now it’s all about mismatched outfits and vintage sportswear

    At first, the goblins came for our downtime. Going “goblin mode” was a lifestyle confined to the home – to the bed, mostly. The “comforts of depravity” it brought (“watching 90 Day Fiancé on mute while scrolling endlessly through social media, pouring the end of a bag of chips in your mouth”, for example) weren’t compatible with doing anything productive.

    Enter the gym goblin. The optics remain much the same – think ancient T-shirts, knackered socks, oversized cardigans – but the setting has changed, with goblincore devotees rising up from unmade beds, Diet Cokes in hand, to hit the treadmill. It’s Diana, Princess of Wales’s oversized college sweatshirts meets Josh O’Connor’s half-tracksuit look for the Disclosure Day press tour – and the polar opposite of the matcha-drinking, Lululemoned “clean girl” aesthetic that dominates fitness circles.

    Continue reading...

  • Is it an alien? A dinosaur? Is it going to kill us all? Our writer hits Ashdown Forest for the Big One Hundred celebrations – and finds its magic enchanting new generations

    The rolling idyll of heath and forest, spinney and stream that gave us the Heffalump, the Woozle and, most famously of all, Winnie-the-Pooh, has a new fantastical resident. Creeping through the bracken, making strange cooing and purring noises, is a shapeshifting creature with a huge tubular nose and eyes inspired by adders. It shimmies with iridescent patches and the psychedelic purple of flowering heather in high summer.

    Poppet, a puppet made by costume designer Jack Irving and brought to life by a team of 10 award-winning puppeteers, is performing for schoolchildren in Ashdown Forest, East Sussex. The primary school class squeal with delighted fear as the purple apparition transforms itself from caterpillar to bird to munching monster in sinuous moves.

    Continue reading...

Eco Health News feeds

Eco Nature News feeds