Both Monsanto and the EPA knew full well, at least as early as 1981, that glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide, causes cancer in mammals. Earlier studies conducted during the late 1970s and early 1980s appear to have documented cancer-causing effects from glyphosate in rats, mice and dogs, though this information was buried by Monsanto with the blessing of the EPA.
Using "trade secrets" as an excuse to keep the findings of these studies confidential, Monsanto successfully cherry picked and manipulated its cohort of study data to suggest that glyphosate was safe, and the rest is history. Except that previously hidden memoranda that have since come to light reveal a whole lot more about the true nature of this pervasive chemical pesticide.
According to Sustainable Pulse, uncovered EPA memos from the early 1980s point to research showing that glyphosate caused significant damage to the kidneys of rats. These same studies also noted hyperplasia in the rats, which is considered a very early and necessary step in the formation of cancerous tumors.
In 1981, the EPA scrutinized this data and pressed Monsanto for more information before granting a NOEL, or "no observed adverse effect level," for glyphosate. But less than one year later, Monsanto successfully obfuscated the data and convinced the EPA that glyphosate was safe under the guise that conflicting data was suddenly a "trade secret."
"The evidence shows that by 1981 both Monsanto and the EPA were aware of malignant tumours and pre-cancerous conditions in the test animals which were fed small doses of glyphosate in the secret feeding experiments," said Dr. Brian John for GM-Free Cymru, about the facts.
"Although concerns were expressed at the time by EPA committees, these concerns were later suppressed under the weight of conflicting evidence brought forward by Monsanto, some of it involving the inappropriate use of historical control data of dubious quality. None of these studies is available for independent examination."
Monsanto hid glyphosate dangers by substantially reducing exposure levels in test mice
One of the ways that Monsanto covered up the true dangers associated with glyphosate was to substantially reduce the amount of the chemical given to study rats. Now-exposed EPA memos reveal that test rats in the new studies were suddenly being given only 1/100 of the amount of glyphosate given in earlier studies, with no explanation.A 1986 EPA memo admitted that this was a curious move by Monsanto, adding that the glyphosate doses tested were nowhere near the "maximally tolerated dose." If the glyphosate doses had remained the same, remarked the then Oncogenicity Peer Review Committee, "tumours might have been induced."
"The effect of glyphosate on endocrine tissue such as breast and prostate, or even placenta, is disruptive at least and an increased incidence of endocrine neoplasia is likely to be seen in National Statistics," added retired academic pathologist Dr. Stanley Ewen, noting that glyphosate's association with pre-neoplastic changes in experimental mice were never revealed as they should have been.
"The Glyphosate Task Force denies the involvement of glyphosate in human malignancy despite their knowledge of many reports of lymphomas and pituitary adenomas in experimental animals dosed with glyphosate."
The tobacco industry, as you may recall, never really recovered from its shameful legacy of lying to the public about the safety of cigarettes. But Monsanto's massive cover-up of glyphosate's cancer-causing effects takes evil to a whole new level, as the multinational corporation not only lied about the herbicide's safety but actively manipulated a federal agency tasked with protecting public health in the process.
Be sure to check out the new World Health Organization International Agency for Research on Cancer report that declares glyphosate to be "probably carcinogenic" to humans:
TheLancet.com.
Sources:
http://sustainablepulse.com
www.thelancet.com
http://www.epa.gov[PDF]
http://www.epa.gov[PDF]
http://sustainablepulse.com
No comments:
Post a Comment