Europe to Ban Lindane and Permethrin from use on crops but not from personal use for head lice, scabies, etc.
(Excuse me, this doesn't make any sense. If these poisons are to horrible to use on crops just in case we might ingest them... why still allow our children to be soaked in them for head lice.)
Subject: Ban on Lindane and Permethrin------
Date: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 07:21:42 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
Europe To Ban Powerful Insecticide on Crops But Not in Homes - to read
article click on: http://ens.lycos.com/ens/jul2000/2000L-07-18-10.html
or read below.
BRUSSELS, Belgium, July 18, 2000 (ENS) - The controversial
insecticide lindane could be subject to a partial ban by the Europe Union's 15
member countries within 18 months.
The EU's Standing Committee on Plant Health recommended the
ban Thursday. It is expected to be formally approved by the European Commission,
the EU's executive branch, responsible for proposing legislation.
Countries will be given six months to withdraw approval for
lindane products designed to be used on plants, plus a further 12 months to use
up stocks of these products. Use of lindane in domestic products such as ant
killer will still be permitted.
To see magnified image of head louse, once commonly dealt
with by lindane. (Photo courtesy National Pediculosis Association) click on
above url.
Also known as gamma benzene hexachloride, lindane is a
powerful insecticide used to treat everything from head lice to insects on
timber. Farmers spray food crops
with lindane, particularly apples, wheat and maize (corn).
Last year, an EU report, prepared by the Austrian
government, called for sales of the chemical to be suspended because of concerns
about lindane's effect on human health.
The Austrian report listed lindane as a carcinogenic
substance with no safe exposure limit. It said lindane could damage the immune
system and nervous system while causing hormone disruption, behavioral
changes and birth defects.
Lindane has been described by the International Agency for
Research on Cancer as a possible human carcinogen and has been linked with
breast cancer and birth defects.
The pesticide is already banned for agricultural use in
Sweden, Denmark and France and is subject of a long running worldwide campaign
by the international environmental group Pesticides Action Network
(PAN).
David Buffin, of PAN's United Kingdom branch was pleased
with the EU committee's announcement. "We have been warning for many years
that lindane should be banned. At long last we are being listened to," said
Buffin. "This pesticide was developed in the 1940s when cheap and
relatively hazardous chemicals were considered acceptable. It should have no
place in the 21st century."
Children are more vulnerable because they often play in
areas where pesticides are commonly applied, like lawns. (To see photo by Keith
Weller, courtesy Agricultural Research Service - click on above url.)
Buffin and representatives of other environmental groups,
such as Friends of the Earth, expressed disappointment that the ban does not
extend to lindane's use as a domestic product.
Helen Lynn of Women's Environmental Network said,
"Whilst we welcome today's decision we are disappointed that the public
will still be exposed to this dangerous chemical in the home."
The standing committee on plant health made its decision
during a review of nine pesticides. The committee will eventually have to accept
or reject a total of 900 pesticides. Another two substances considered
last week - permethrin and quintozene - will also be banned.
Another three - bentazone, esfenvalerate and triasulfuron - will be
included in the official list of EU approved pesticides, bringing the
total so far to eight.
From July 2003, only substances on this list will be
eligible for use in the European Union. Decisions on the others were postponed.
The European Crop Protection Association said it could not
comment on individual pesticides but stressed that the EU pesticide review
program is so far behind schedule that newly developed pesticides with better
environmental profiles are finding it difficult to reach the marketplace.
I personally find it amazing that Lindane and Permethrin are still "registered" to be used to "treat" lice and scabies infestations. If they are too dangerous to eat after being highly diluted and sprayed weeks or months before, how on earth can you "safely" put them directly on the heads or bodies of children? Steve
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