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New
Internationalist 323![]()
![]()
May
2000![]()
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THE
PESTICIDE INDUSTRY
Pesticides are big business. If you drew a chart of the growth of the industry
from virtually zero in the 1940s to an agrochemical market worth $31 billion
in 1998, the incline would resemble a cliff face. And it grows each year: 1998
was up 5% on 1997.1
Corporations are constantly merging to form ever-bigger conglomerations; for
example, Novartis was formed from the merger of Ciba and Sandoz and is now planning
to merge with Zeneca to form Syngenta. AgrEvo (itself a merger of Hoechst and
Schering) is merging with Rhône-Poulenc to form Aventis. The two new corporations
will be the biggest agrochemical companies in the world.

THE
DIRTY DOZEN
A list of 12 dangerous pesticides was drawn up in the early 1980s by the Pesticide
Action Network, which sought to ban them all. Many have since been banned. Aldicarb,
lindane (gamma-HCH); paraquat and pentachlorophenol remain in use and others
are still found in our foods because they are so persistent in the environment.
Almost all are in the World Health Organizations hazardous
category.
| Active ingredient | WHO classification | Type of pesticide | Health effects |
| Aldicarb | Extremely hazardous | Carbamate insecticide used on citrus fruits, peanuts, vegetables | Highly toxic to workers and wildlife |
| Aldrin | Highly hazardous; widely banned for agricultural use | Organochlorine insecticide | Potentially cancerous and affects reproductive system |
| Chlordane | Moderately hazardous | Organochlorine insecticide used on crops and termites | Persistent in the environment |
| Chlordimeform | Moderately hazardous; banned | Insecticide that was mainly used on cotton | Potentially cancerous |
| DBCP | Extremely hazardous | Fumigant and insecticide | Potentially cancerous, causes sterility, contaminates groundwater |
| DDT | Highly hazardous; widely banned for agricultural use | Organophosphate insecticide now mainly used against mosquitoes where it is still the cheapest, most effective killer | Widely used after its discovery in 1945, since proven to have negative effects on health and the environment |
| Dieldrin | Highly hazardous; widely banned for agricultural use | Organochlorine insecticide used on fruit, soil and seeds | Birth defects, cancers and serious environmental impact |
| EDB (ethylene dibromide) | Not classified | Soil fumigant | Evidence of cancer-causing effects |
| Endrin | Highly hazardous | Organochlorine insecticide | Toxic to fish, bees, wildlife |
| Heptachlor | Moderately hazardous; widely banned for agricultural use | Organochlorine insecticide used for soil pests, mosquitoes, fire ants | Persistent in the environment, causes cancer in mice |
| Hexachlorobenzene | Extremely hazardous | Organochlorine fungicide widely used in the past | Adverse effects on humans and the environment |
| Lindane (Gamma-HCH) | Moderately hazardous; banned in Sweden and New Zealand | Insecticide used in agriculture and for head lice control | Persistent in the environment and with cancerous and endocrine-disrupting effects |
| Paraquat | Moderately hazardous | Herbicide and drying agent used on rice and soya beans | Harmful to animals |
| Parathion | Extremely hazardous | Organophosphate insecticide used on citrus and cotton and more generally | Extremely hazardous and toxic; a teaspoon spilled on the skin can be fatal; continues to cause extensive poisonings |
| Parathion-methyl | Extremely hazardous | Organophosphate insecticide | As above |
| Pentachlorophenol | Extremely hazardous | Fungicide used on cereals and mushrooms | Toxic; dangerous to fish |
| Toxaphene | Moderately hazardous; banned | Insecticide used on cattle, grain, fruit and vegetables | Extremely toxic to fish and harmful to other animals |
| 2,4,5,T | Moderately hazardous; banned | Phenoxyacetic acid herbicide | Harmful to fish, humans and the environment |
BUYING
AND SELLING
The worlds five main pesticide-producing and exporting states are France,
Germany, the US, Britain and Switzerland although the fastest-growing markets
are in Brazil, Germany, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Australia and Canada.
Many of the same countries also import pesticides: imports grew from a world
total of $8.0 billion in 1991 to $11.6 billion in 1998.
Pesticides exports/imports by country3 in $ millions
SPRAYING
THE CROPS
Pesticides are meant to kill. They fall into five main chemical categories,
all of which have different effects: organochlorines (eg DDT) which are
persistent in air and water and remain for a long time in body fat; organophosphates
(eg parathion) which damage the nervous system and were originally developed
as nerve gases in the First World War; phenoxyacetic acids (eg 2,4,5-T,
2,4-D which combined made up Agent Orange); carbamates (eg aldicarb)
which destroy an enzyme necessary to a pests nervous system; and synthetic
pyrethroids (cypermethrin, deltamethrin etc). In 1998, herbicides accounted
for 49% of world pesticide use, followed by insecticides at 27%, fungicides
at 20% and others 4%.
Half of all agrochemicals are used on the five main crops cereals, corn/maize, rice, cotton and soya.
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A
PRICE WORTH PAYING?
The hazards
of pesticide use are now widely recognized, although statistics are hard to
gather. The World Health Organization estimates that at least three million
people are poisoned by pesticides every year and more than 200,000 die. It is
estimated that up to 25 million agricultural workers are poisoned every year.
In Malaysia and Sri Lanka, 7 to 15 per cent of farmers experience poisoning at least once in their lives.
In Thailand, a survey of 250 government hospitals and health centres revealed that some 5,500 people were admitted for pesticide poisoning in 1985 alone, of whom 384 died.
In the Philippines, 50 per cent of rice farmers have suffered from sickness due to pesticide use.
In Latin America, 10 to 30 per cent of agricultural workers show inhibition of the blood enzyme, cholinesterase, which is a sign of organophosphate poisoning.
In Venezuela, 10,300 cases of poisoning with 576 deaths occurred between 1980 and 1990.
In Brazil, 28 per cent of farmers in Santa Catarina state say they have been poisoned at least once and in Parana state some 7,800 people were poisoned between 1982 and 1992.
In Egypt, more than 50 per cent of cotton workers in the 1990s suffered symptoms of chronic pesticide poisoning, including neurological and vision disorders.
In China, 42,800 new cases of pesticide poisoning were reported in 1994, including 3,900 fatalities. Many were said to be victims of home-made cocktails marketed illegally.7
1
Agrow report No 330 11 June 1999.
2 Agrow report No 335 27 August 1999.
3 Food and Agriculture Organization.
4 BAA/Wood Mackenzie in Agrow report No 330.
5 Our Stolen Future Theo Colborn, Dianne Dumanoski and John Peterson
Myers (Abacus 1996).
6 Organic Cotton Dorothy Myers and Sue Stolton (Intermediate Technology
1999).
7 Bugs in the System edited by William Vorley and Dennis Keeney,
Earthscan, London 1998



