Is Weed Killer in Drinking Water Dangerous? Govt. Is Letting the
Chemical Industry Come Up with the Answer
By Danielle Ivory, The Huffington Post Investigative Fund
Posted on July 14, 2010, Printed on July 22, 2010
http://www.alternet.org/story/147540/
Companies with a financial interest in a weed-killer sometimes found
in drinking water paid for thousands of studies federal regulators are
using to assess the herbicide’s health risks, records of the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency show. Many of these industry-funded
studies, which largely support atrazine’s safety, have never been
published or subjected to an independent scientific peer review.
Meanwhile, some independent studies documenting potentially harmful
effects on animals and humans are not included in the body of research
the EPA deems relevant to its safety review, the Huffington Post
Investigative Fund has found. These studies include many that have been
published in respected scientific journals.
Even so, the EPA says that it would be “very difficult for someone to
put a thumb on the scale” to slant the outcome.
Atrazine is one of the most widely used herbicides in the U.S. An
estimated 76 million pounds of the chemical are sprayed on corn and
other fields in the U.S. each year, sometimes ending up in rivers,
streams, and drinking water supplies. It has been the focus of intense
scientific debate over its potential to cause cancer, birth defects, and
hormonal and reproductive problems. As the Huffington Post Investigative
Fund reported in a series of articles last fall, the EPA failed to warn
the public that the weed-killer had been found at levels above federal
safety limits in drinking water in at least four states. Some water
utilities are suing Syngenta to have it pay their costs of filtering the
chemical.
Now the EPA is re-evaluating the health risks of atrazine, which was
banned in the European Union in 2004 due to a lack of evidence to
support its safe use. That ban includes Switzerland, where atrazine’s
manufacturer, Syngenta, is headquartered. The EPA expects to announce
results of its re-examination of the herbicide in September 2010. It
could take action ranging from restrictions on its use on crops to an
outright ban. Or it could permit continued use without additional
restrictions.
The company, one of the world’s largest agribusinesses, says the
chemical has been used safely for decades and restrictions could prove
devastating to farmers who are heavily dependent on the inexpensive
herbicide. Atrazine poses “no harm” to the general population or to
drinking water supplies, said company spokesman Steven Goldsmith.
EPA records obtained by The Huffington Post Investigative Fund show
that at least half of the 6,611 studies the agency is reviewing to help
make its decision were conducted by scientists and organizations with a
financial stake in atrazine, including Syngenta or its affiliated
companies and research contractors.
More than 80 percent of studies on which the EPA are relying have
never been published. This means that they have not undergone rigorous
“peer review” by independent scientists, a customary method to ensure
studies are credible and scientifically sound before they can be
published in major journals.
At the same time several prominent studies by independent academic
scientists in well-respected scientific journals -– showing negative
reproductive effects of atrazine in animals and humans – are absent from
the EPA’s list.
That finding may raise concerns about how the agency is doing its
work. Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, which oversees environmental regulators, told the
Investigative Fund, “it’s critically important that EPA use all of the
information at its disposal.”
Agency scientists may review studies not on the list, but EPA senior
policy analyst William Jordan said that the 6,611 studies are those
considered “relevant to the assessment of atrazine.”
‘Not Just Atrazine’
EPA spokeswoman Betsaida Alcantara said the list was not exhaustive
and that some studies may not be on the list because they were not given
an eight-digit “master record identification number,” which the agency
uses to keep track of studies. There is “no uniform practice” for
assigning numbers to studies submitted by people other than those
working for herbicide, fungicide or pesticide manufacturers, she added.
EPA officials said that with a limited budget the agency must rely
heavily on research sponsored by parties with a stake in the outcome.
The agency’s “test guidelines” governing how experiments are conducted
-– the types and number of lab animals to be used, for instance. These
provide sufficient safeguards against skewed results, officials said.
“Companies have a very strong incentive to follow the guidelines,”
said EPA senior analyst Jordan. “We hope and think that we have written
the guidelines with enough detail that it would be very difficult for
someone to put a thumb on the scale, as it were, to slant the outcome,
[or] to make something look safer than it is.
Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist specializing in health issues at
the Natural Resources Defense Council, argues that relying on a company
to test the safety of its own product – an “inherent conflict” of
interest – is part of a larger pattern at the EPA. “It’s not just
happening with atrazine,” she said.
Hundreds of herbicides, pesticides, and other chemicals are regulated
by the EPA, whose decisions can have significant implications for public
health and on the abilities of an array of multinational companies to
earn billions of dollars in the U.S.
By law, industry influence often is built into the regulatory process
of the federal government. At the Food and Drug Administration, for
instance, clinical trials conducted by pharmaceutical companies are used
to determine whether pills and devices work and are safe. Makers of
pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides also must pay for studies on
their products. If they meet agency rules for conducting the testing,
the EPA must accept them.
The ‘Funding Effect’
But is industry-funded research always reliable? A pair of scientists
funded by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, and the EPA scrutinized a Syngenta-funded Canadian study –-
one that is not on the EPA’s list. The scientists said they found
numerous inaccuracies and misleading statements.
The scientists who questioned the study, University of South Florida
biologists Jason Rohr and Krista McCoy, published their critique in the
March 2010 issue of the journal Conservation Letters. In all, they
tallied what they said were 122 inaccurate and 22 misleading statements,
of which 96.5 percent appeared to support atrazine’s safety. The widely
cited study focused on the herbicide’s effects on fish and other aquatic
creatures.
Rohr and McCoy also asserted that the Canadian study, which was done
in 2008, misrepresented more than 50 other studies. For example, it
incorrectly suggested that only one scientist had demonstrated the
chemical’s gender-altering effects on frogs. In fact, several other
scientists demonstrated such effects.
The study dismissed one of Rohr’s papers as invalid, noting wrongly
that the researcher had filtered atrazine out of a water tank while
trying to assess the chemical’s effect on the aquatic organisms in the
tank.
The Canadian study also misrepresented results, figures, and
conclusions of other studies, according to the University of South
Florida biologists.
Rohr, who served on an EPA advisory panel examining atrazine last
year, told the Investigative Fund that he felt compelled “to set the
record straight given the potential policy and environmental
implications of these misconceptions and inaccuracies.”
The author of the Canadian study, University of Guelph (Ontario)
biologist Keith Solomon, declined to respond to questions from the
Investigative Fund about his financial ties to Syngenta, the company’s
influence, or the inaccuracies and mischaracterizations the South
Florida biologists said they had uncovered. Solomon noted that other
scientists had come to similar conclusions, and that governments in the
U.S. and Australia had not found any significant risk to creatures
living in water.
While the critiqued study is not on the EPA’s list, several other
studies by Solomon are.
Wendy Wagner, an expert in environmental policy at the University of
Texas law school, said that the criticism of the Canadian study
demonstrates a phenomenon sometimes referred to as “the funding effect.”
“It is next to impossible to squeeze all of the discretion out of a
researcher, and when he has a strong incentive to find a particular
result, the result can be unreliable and badly biased research,” said
Wagner, an authority on the influence of politics and special interests
on science. “There is compelling evidence that bias still pervades
sponsored pesticide research – research that presumably is done in
accord with EPA’s guidelines.”
Meanwhile, some independently funded academic research published in
major scientific journals is missing from the list of papers the EPA is
using to make its decisions on atrazine. Absent are studies published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Environmental Health Perspectives, and Nature. Many works
by independent academic scientists such as Tyrone Hayes and Rohr – who
have demonstrated a range of potential reproductive and hormonal effects
of the chemical – are not on the list.
Some peer-reviewed studies from prestigious journals fail to meet the
agency’s standards, said EPA analyst Jordan, citing as an example work
by scientists such as Hayes, who recently found that low doses of
atrazine could turn male frogs into female frogs.
Jordan explained that the agency couldn’t rely on Hayes’ and the
other scientists’ research in part because the government lacked
protocols for testing chemicals on frogs. So the EPA developed those
guidelines and asked Syngenta to study the issue. The company’s
researchers reported that they were unable to replicate Hayes’ findings.
Jordan said the Syngenta study “superceded” Hayes’ and the other
scientists’ studies. The EPA, on its Website, currently states that
atrazine causes no such adverse effects on frogs and that “no additional
testing is warranted” to address the issue.
Environmental groups have in the past criticized the EPA for allowing
chemical companies to wield disproportionate influence over regulatory
decisions. While evaluating the safety of atrazine in 2003, the EPA
allowed representatives from Syngenta to participate in closed-door
negotiations with the agency, according to documents obtained by the
NRDC in 2004.
Missing Evidence
Dale Kemery, an EPA spokesman, defended the practice of omitting some
studies. The agency’s safety “review may not include every study that
has been conducted, since some may not meet the standards that are
appropriate for a regulatory setting or they may not be on target for
the issues to be assessed.”
The EPA considers industry-sponsored studies “scientifically more
robust than are the studies generated by people in academia,” said
Jordan, the agency's senior policy analyst. “That’s generally because
companies spend more money on their studies and can attend to details
that are potentially important that people in academia just can’t afford
to do.”
Jordan added that agency oversight of the thousands of unpublished
studies on the list is just as rigorous as a peer-review by scientists
prior to publication in a scientific journal. “I know that people might
not agree with this proposition, but I believe that the scientists at
EPA constitute a peer-review,” he said. “Our scientists go over the
studies with a fine tooth comb.”
EPA officials said they were not able to provide a list of all
omitted research.
A spokeswoman for CropLife America, the Washington D.C.-based trade
association that represents pesticide and herbicide manufacturers, said
EPA oversight is thorough, regardless of whether studies have appeared
in peer-reviewed journals.
“Whether or not they have been published, the studies submitted to
EPA for registration support of pesticide products are subject to
scientific review by EPA scientists that is equally, if not more,
rigorous and demanding than the pre-publication peer review conducted by
any scientific journal,” said spokeswoman Mary Emma Young.
Some people are skeptical about the rigor of the EPA’s scrutiny.
“What worries me,” said the University of Texas’ Wagner, “is the
possibility that there isn’t time or energy within EPA to give a lot of
oversight to this unpublished, industry-funded research, especially when
the number of unpublished studies for a chemical like atrazine are in
the thousands.”
A former EPA official, epidemiologist Lynn Goldman, said it is normal
and necessary for the agency to accept unpublished and industry-funded
studies, most of which would not be interesting enough to publish in
scientific journals.
“This is the way that the system was built by Congress. It could be
changed but the EPA does not have the authority to turn the system
upside down,” said Goldman, a former assistant administrator for toxic
substances during the Clinton administration.
The existence of a list of relevant research for EPA review has
played a prominent role in public arguments for the herbicide’s safety.
Journalists, scientists, and advocates for atrazine have frequently
cited the “6,000” studies.
In 2005, Anne Lindsay, then a top official in the EPA’s Office of
Pesticide Programs, brought up the number of studies during
congressional testimony. “Atrazine is one of the most well-examined
pesticides in the marketplace,” she said, noting that “there are nearly
6,000 studies in EPA files on the human health and environmental effect
of atrazine.”
Syngenta now cites the number in its press materials and on its
website – not merely as a tally of studies but as proof of its safety.
“Atrazine passes the most stringent, up-to-date safety requirements in
the world,” said spokesman Paul Minehart. “In 2006, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) re-registered atrazine in 2006
based on the overwhelming evidence of safety from nearly 6,000 studies.”
Danielle Ivory is a reporter for the
Huffington Post
Investigative Fund. Her videos and writing have appeared on
Democracy Now, The Nation, Alternet, Truthout, and The Huffington Post
and the American News Project.
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