The new PCB: Monsanto's
Roundup weed killer turning up in air, rain and rivers
Ethan A. Huff, staff write
(NaturalNews)
Last month, the US Geological Survey (USGS) released a report showing
that air, rainwater and rivers across the Midwest US agricultural belt
are routinely contaminated with high levels of glyphosate, a pervasive
herbicide produced by biotechnology giant Monsanto. And according to
some, Monsanto has likely known about this for some time, but chosen
to hide it from the public.
After two
years of gathering and analyzing environmental samples, USGS scientists
determined that the more than 180 million pounds of glyphosate spread
on conventional and genetically-modified (GM) crops every year is causing
"significant" environmental contamination.
Certain that
Monsanto is hiding its own critical information about Roundup, Ken Cook,
president of the consumer advocacy organization Environmental Working
Group (EWG), has written an open letter to Hugh Grant, chairman and
president of Monsanto, petitioning him to immediately release any and
all studies the company is hiding about the herbicide.
"Monsanto
notoriously hid PCB (polychlorinated biphenyl) contamination in
Alabama for decades," said Cook, referring to the infamous Monsanto
PCB scandal where a plant producing the chemical from 1929 to 1972 ended
up turning the entire town of Anniston, Ala., into a type of toxic waste
zone -- and PCB is still showing up around the area to this day.
"We
are asking that in this case, [Monsanto] tell the public what it knew
about glyphosate contamination, and when it knew. It is inconceivable
that a company with Monsanto's scientific capacity did not predict,
and examine, the possibility of air and water contamination by glyphosate."
Back in the
summer, it was revealed that Monsanto
knew glyphosate caused birth defects, endocrine disruption, DNA
damage, reproductive and developmental toxicity, neurotoxicity, and
cancer. This was discovered in many of its own scientific studies. But
according to reports, the company knowingly withheld this crucial information
from the public, and from government officials, in order to keep the
product on the market.
So is it
unreasonable, then, to assume that Monsanto is aware of, but withholding,
critical data proving that glyphosate permeates into the deepest corners
of the natural environment upon extensive use, contaminating everything
in its path? Cook appears to think so, and we tend to agree with him.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
You can read Cook's full
letter to Monsanto's Grant here:
http://www.ewg.org/release/government-tests-find-roundup-widespread-water-air
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/033699_Roundup_pollution.html#ixzz1kgK5eiWH