May 9, 2013
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The following article first appeared on Mother Jones. For more great content,
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Last week, the European Commission voted to place a
two-year moratorium on
most uses of neonicotinoid pesticides, on the suspicion that they're
contributing to the global crisis in honeybee health (a topic I've
touched on
here,
here,
here, and
here).
Since then, several people have asked me whether Europe's move might
inspire the US Environmental Protection Agency to make a similar
move—currently, neonics are
widely used in several of our most prevalent crops, including corn, soy, cotton, and wheat.
The answer is no. As I
reported recently,
an agency press officer told me the EU move will have no bearing on the
EPA's own reviews of the pesticides, which aren't scheduled for release
until 2016 at the earliest.
All of which got me thinking about
other food-related substances and practices that are banned in Europe
but green-lighted here. Turns out there are lots. Aren't you glad you
don't live under the Old World regulatory jackboot, where the
authorities deny people's freedom to quaff atrazine-laced drinking
water, etc., etc.? Let me know in comments if I'm missing any.
1. Atrazine
Why it's a problem: A
"potent endocrine disruptor," Syngenta's popular corn herbicide has been linked to a range of reproductive problems at extremely low doses in both
amphibiansand
humans, and it commonly
leaches out of farm fields and into people's drinking water.
What Europe did: B
anned it in 2003.
US status: EPA: "Atrazine will begin registration review, EPA's periodic reevaluation program for existing pesticides, in mid-2013."
2. Arsenic in chicken, turkey, and pig feed
Why it's a problem: Arsenic is
beloved of industrial-scale livestock producers because it makes
animals grow faster and turns their meat a rosy pink. It enters feed in
organic form, which isn't harmful to humans. Trouble is, in animals
guts, it
quickly goes inorganic, and thus becomes poisonous. Several studies, including one by the
FDA,
have found heightened levels of inorganic arsenic in supermarket
chicken, and it also ends up in manure, where it can move into
tap water. Fertilizing rice fields with arsenic-laced manure may be
partially responsible for heightened arsenic levels in US rice.
What Europe did: According to the
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, arsenic-based compounds "were never approved as safe for animal feed in the European Union, Japan, and many other countries."
US status: The drug giant Pfizer "voluntarily"
stopped marketing
the arsenical feed additive Roxarsone back in 2011. But there are still
several arsenicals on the market. On May 1, a coalition of enviro
groups including the Center for Food Safety, the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy, and the Center for Biological Diversity
filed a lawsuit demanding that the FDA ban them from feed.
3. "Poultry litter" in cow feed
Why it's a problem: You know how arsenic goes inorganic—and thus poisonous—in chickens' guts? Consider that their arsenic-laced manure is
then commonly used as a feed for
cows.
According to Consumers Union, the stuff "consists primarily of manure,
feathers, spilled feed, and bedding material that accumulate on the
floors of the buildings that house chickens and turkeys." The "spilled
feed" part is of special concern, because chickens are often fed "meat
and bone meal from dead cattle," CU reported, and that stuff can spill
into the litter and be fed back to cows, raising
mad cow disease concerns.
What Europe did: Banned all forms of animal protein, including chicken litter, in cow feed in 2001.
US status: The practice remains unrestricted. US cattle consume about 2 billion pounds of it annually, Consumers Union's Michael Hansen
told me last year.
4. Chlorine washes for poultry carcasses
Why it's a problem: As
the US chicken industry has sped up kill lines in recent years, it has
resorted to heavier use of chlorine-based washes to "decrease microbial
loads on carcasses," the
Washington Post recently
reported, quoting a previously unreleased USDA document. As I've
noted,
the USDA is preparing to release new rules that would speed up kill
lines still more as well as allow companies to douse every carcass that
comes down the line with antimicrobial sprays, "whether they are
contaminated or not." According to the
Post, poultry workers
face a "range of ailments" to the practice, including "asthma and other
severe respiratory problems, burns, rashes, irritated eyes, and sinus
ulcers and other sinus problems."
What Europe did: The EU not only bans the practice, but
refuses to accept US poultry that has been treated with antimicrobial sprays.
US status: As stated above, the USDA is preparing to roll out new rules that will increase the practice.
5. Antibiotics as growth promoters on livestock farms
Why they're a problem: Antibiotic use has
surged on US animal farms in recent years—and now accounts for
80 percent of all antibiotic use. Meanwhile, meat sold in US supermarkets is rife with
antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
What Europe did: In the
EU,
all antibiotics used in human medicines are banned on farms—and no
antibiotics can be used on farms for "nonmedical purposes," i.e., growth
promotion.
US status: The FDA is
floating new rules that would ban antibiotics as growth promoters—but the regulation would be voluntary.
6. Ractopomine and other pharmaceutical growth enhancers in animal feed
Why it's a problem: Fed to an estimated 60 to 80 percent of US hogs,
ractopomine makes
animals grow fast while also staying lean. Unfortunately, it does so by
mimicking stress hormones, making animals miserable. The excellent food
safety reporter Helena Bottemiller looked at FDA documents and
found that
between its introduction in 1999 and 2011, the drug had killed 210,000
pigs—"more than any other animal drug on the market." Pigs treated with
it, she found, suffer from ailments ranging from hyperactivity and
trembling to broken limbs and the inability to walk. (Beef cows
are fed similar drugs, as are
turkeys.) Traces of these pharmaceuticals
routinely end up in our meat—and according to Bottemiller, their effects on humans are little-studied.
What Europe did: Europe not only bars its own producers from using ractopamine, it also
refuses to allow imports of meat from animals treated with it—as do
China and Russia.
US status: Rather than trying to rein in ractopamine use, the Obama administration is
actively seeking to force Europe and other nations to accept our ractopamine-treated pork.
7. Gestation crates
Why it's a problem: The
sows that breed the hogs confined in US factory farms spend nearly
their entire lives stuffed into crates "so small the animals can't even
turn around or take more than a step forward or backward," the Humane
Society of the United States
reported. An undercover HSUS investigation of a sow facility run by pork giant Smithfield in 2010 found, among other horrors,
this:
The
animals engaged in stereotypic behaviors such as biting the bars of
crates, indicating poor well-being in the extreme confinement
conditions. Some had bitten their bars so incessantly that blood from
their mouths coated the fronts of their crates. The breeding pigs also
suffered injuries from sharp crate protrusions and open pressure sores
that developed from their unyielding confinement.
What Europe did: Banned them, effective this year.
US status: Pork
giants Smithfield, Cargill, and Hormel have pledged to phase them out;
several fast-food chains including McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, and
Subway have
promised to stop buying from suppliers who use the crates; and nine states have banned the practice, HSUS
reported. But the practice remains widespread, and as industry flack Rick Berman recently
put it, a large swath of the pork industry "has no plans to stop using standard sow housing."
Tom Philpott is the food and ag blogger for Mother Jones.
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