The Pesticide Industry’s Disinformation and Denial
For decades the pesticide industry engaged in denying science and spreading disinformation. A new report, Merchants of Poison: How Monsanto Sold the World on a Toxic Pesticide, focuses on glyphosate, known by its brand name Roundup.
It is the first comprehensive review of Monsanto’s product defense strategy. U.S. Right to Know relied on internal corporate documents released during lawsuits plus documents obtained through public records requests to write the report.
“The
pesticide industry is not just following in the footsteps of Big Tobacco and
Big Oil, they co-wrote the playbook — from their attacks on Silent Spring
author Rachel Carson 60 years ago to the recent Monsanto-led assault on the
cancer researchers of the World Health Organization,” said Stacy Malkan, lead
author of the report and co-founder of U.S. Right to Know, in a statement.
Glyphosate’s Dirty History
A Monsanto chemist discovered in 1970 that glyphosate works well as an herbicide. In 1974, the company patented the herbicide under the trade name Roundup. For 20 years, glyphosate was used less frequently than other herbicides.
However,
as Monsanto began developing genetically modified crops, glyphosate use
increased. It is now the most commonly used agricultural chemical in the world.
Registered in 130 countries, glyphosate is approved for over 100 crops and marketed
as 750 different products.
Many everyday foods contain traces of glyphosate, from cereal and hummus to honey and wine, and glyphosate is also found in rain and human bodies. Researchers for the Centers for Disease Control found glyphosate in the urine of over 80 percent of the children and adults they tested.
In 1984, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency labeled glyphosate as having the potential to cause cancer.
The World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer
(IARC) classified glyphosate
as a probable human carcinogen.
Cancer
is not the only disease linked to glyphosate. Researchers associated the
chemical with high rates of kidney disease in farming communities and low birth
weight in the Midwest. Studies also show that glyphosate can be much more
harmful when combined with other chemicals.
There
are also environmental concerns with glyphosate. Under the Endangered Species
Act, the EPA found that the herbicide can harm or kill plants and animals.
Studies show that glyphosate is the primary driver of the decreased monarch
populations because the milkweed plants they depend on are decreasing.
Glyphosate reduces bees’ ability to reproduce and find food, sometimes kills
them, and harms soil organisms.
The
sourcing of glyphosate is also a problem. Phosphate ore extracted and refined
into elemental phosphorus is used to produce glyphosate. The stripping off of
soil on mountaintops is a mining method that destroys vegetation, contaminates
water, and destroys habitats for critical species.
The Pesticide Industry’s Disinformation
Tactics
The pesticide industry uses a move from the playbooks of the tobacco and oil industries. In 1994, seven tobacco executives swore that nicotine and cigarettes are not addictive. Tobacco executives denied that cigarettes cause cancer for decades.
In 2019, a
former Exxon consultant testified that in the
early 1980s, scientists working for the company predicted how fossil fuel use
would increase carbon levels and lead to rising temperatures. The American
Petroleum Institute identified global warming and the role of fossil fuel
companies back in 1968.
The
pesticide industry, led by Monsanto, has used similar strategies to cover up
the health and environmental threats
pesticides pose. The report cites five denial tactics Monsanto used:
- ·
They shaped the
scientific record on glyphosate and exerted influence over regulatory reviews
and oversight.
- ·
The company and its
allies in the pesticide industry mobilized public universities and professors
to promote and defend glyphosate and its genetically modified seeds.
- ·
They deployed front
groups, trade groups, and public relations firms to disseminate their disinformation.
- ·
They attacked and
tried to silence and marginalize scientists and journalists who raised
concerns.
- ·
They moved their
message online, dominating Google News search results, and created the false
impression of consensus about the safety of pesticides, specifically
glyphosate.
Stopping the Spin
How
can we stop the disinformation tactics of the pesticide industry? The report
offers six suggestions aimed at policymakers, media outlets, and academics:
- ·
Understand and expose
the strategies.
- ·
Protect the integrity
of scientific journals.
- ·
Uphold strong
journalistic standards for disclosing conflicts of interest and vetting
sources.
- ·
Challenge and expose
corporate influence at universities
- ·
Hold public relations
professionals accountable
- ·
Support independent
investigative journalism
Stopping
the spin of the pesticide industry is crucial for public health and
environmental safety. The public pays for the industry’s deceit, and so does
the environment, as Kendra Klein, Deputy Director of Science with Friends of
the Earth and contributor to the report, said.