L’agent
chimique en cause est le fipronil, une
molécule interdite dans le traitement
des animaux destinés à la chaîne alimentaire. Des éleveurs néerlandais de
volailles ont fait appel à Chickfriend, une société spécialisée dans
l’éradication du pou rouge, qui en a utilisé dans son produit.
Le
fipronil a été mis au point en France par la société Rhône-Poulenc en 1987 et
mis sur le marché en 1993. Il est ensuite devenu la propriété d'Aventis à la suite de la fusion de Rhône-Poulenc avec Hoechst, puis a été revendu à Bayer
en 2002 et finalement à BASF en 2003.
Une controverse s'est développée dans les années 2000 quant à son écotoxicité
qui semble plus importante qu'annoncée par les fabricants pour les abeilles
domestiques et peut-être d'autres apidés sauvages (importants pollinisateurs).
Depuis
2013, l'Autorité européenne de sécurité des aliments (Efsa) considère qu'il
présente «un risque aigu élevé» pour la survie des abeilles quand il est
utilisé comme traitement des semences de maïs. Cet usage a été interdit en
juillet 2013 par la Commission européenne. Wikipédia https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fipronil
L’Office suisse de la sécurité alimentaire (OSAV)
a expliqué dans un communiqué que «les
quantités constatées jusqu’à présent ne mett[ai]ent pas en danger la santé des
consommateurs».
Si l’OSAV est aussi corruptible que l’EPA, alors bonne chance!
Voyez l’article THE SWAMP (1).
Voyez l’article THE SWAMP (1).
Le Canada
est un cancre
La majorité des OGM sont développés pour leurs
tolérances aux herbicides, pour leurs résistances aux insectes ou pour les
deux. Le Canada est le cinquième producteur mondial d’OGM derrière l’Inde,
l’Argentine, le Brésil et les États-Unis. Au Canada, la commercialisation d’une
dizaine de plantes GM a été approuvée : maïs-grain,
canola, pomme de terre, tomate, courge, soja, lin, luzerne, coton, betterave à
sucre, papaye et pomme. En mars 2015, deux pommes résistantes aux
brunissements ont été autorisées pour l’alimentation humaine.
En mai
2016, la commercialisation d’un saumon transgénique à croissance accélérée a été approuvée. Ce
saumon, développé par AquaBounty Technologies (dont l’actionnaire principal est
Intrexon Corporation), a été modifié pour grandir quatre fois plus vite. Il contient des gênes d'autres animaux, notamment d'anguille. Selon de nombreuses publications scientifiques, dont l’étude publiée en 2002
dans la revue American Society of Animal Science, l’hormone de croissance,
produite par transgénèse, aboutit à plusieurs dégâts collatéraux. Ainsi, ces
animaux ont une tendance supérieure aux autres à devenir diabétiques et les
poissons d’AquaBounty devront probablement être vendus sous forme de filets ou
dans des plats cuisinés du fait de leurs difformités. Il s’agit du premier
animal GM destiné à la consommation humaine commercialisé au Canada. Nous sommes les cobayes; il n'a pas encore été approuvé aux États-Unis - on attend d'avoir des résultats de recherche plus poussés.
Ne vous fiez pas aux beaux saumons de la pub d'AquaBounty...
Vous en avez déjà peut-être mangé sans le savoir, et conséquemment sans votre consentement, car au Canada l’étiquetage des OGM se fait de façon volontaire. Ottawa a carrément dit non à l’étiquetage. «Je ne suis pas surpris», confie Thibault Rehn, porte-parole du groupe Vigilance OGM, qui milite pour l'affichage obligatoire des OGM. «Nous sommes vraiment déçus, poursuit-il. Justin Trudeau voulait diriger un gouvernement ouvert et transparent, et ce n'est visiblement pas le cas dans le dossier des OGM. Les Canadiens demandent l'étiquetage depuis 20 ans.»
Or qui dit OGM, dit Monsanto, Roundup, glyphosate,
2,4-D (un des ingrédients actifs de l’Agent Orange), et plus.
D’où l’importance
de faire circuler les histoires sordides de l’industrie chimique partout dans le
monde. Merci Internet.
When enough is enough, justice
comes.
Présentation officielle du projet Poison Papers par
les initiateurs.
The
“Poison Papers” represent a vast trove of rediscovered chemical industry and
regulatory agency documents and correspondence stretching back to the 1920s.
Taken as a whole, the papers show that both industry and regulators understood
the extraordinary toxicity of many chemical products and worked together to
conceal this information from the public and the press. These papers will
transform our understanding of the hazards posed by certain chemicals on the
market and the fraudulence of some of the regulatory processes relied upon to
protect human health and the environment.
The Poison Papers are a compilation of over
20,000 documents obtained from federal agencies and chemical manufacturers via
open records requests and public interest litigation. They include internal
scientific studies and summaries of studies, internal memos and reports,
meeting minutes, strategic discussions, and sworn testimonies. The majority of
these documents have been scanned and digitized by us for the first time and
represent nearly three tons of material. The regulatory agency sources of these
documents include: the EPA, the USDA Forest Service, the FDA, the Veterans
Administration, and the Department of Defense. Chemical manufacturers
referenced in the documents include: Dow, Monsanto, DuPont, and Union Carbide,
as well as many smaller manufacturers and the commercial testing companies who
worked for them.
The Poison Papers are a project of the Bioscience Resource Project and the Center for Media and Democracy. The
Poison Papers were largely collected by author and activist Carol Van Strum.
The Poison Papers catalogue both the secret
concerns of industry and regulators over the hazards of pesticides and other
chemicals and their efforts to conceal those concerns.
Corporate concealment is not a new story.
What is novel in the Poison Papers is abundant evidence that EPA and other
regulators were, often, knowing participants or even primary instigators of
these cover-ups. These regulators failed to inform the public of the hazards of
dioxins and other chemicals; of evidence of fraudulent independent testing;
even of one instance of widespread human exposure. The papers thus reveal, in
the often-incriminating words of the participants themselves, an elaborate
universe of deception and deceit surrounding many pesticides and synthetic
chemicals.
The chemicals most often discussed in the
documents include herbicides and pesticides (such as 2,4-D, Dicamba,
Permethrin, Atrazine, and Agent Orange), dioxins, and PCBs. Some of these
chemicals are among the most toxic and persistent ever manufactured.
Except for PCBs, almost every chemical
discussed in the Poison Papers is still manufactured and sold today, either as
products or as product contaminants. Recent research from Australia, shows that
many newly-synthesized chlorinated chemical products, including the herbicide
2,4-D, remain contaminated with dioxins. Notably, 2,4-D has just been
authorized by EPA for use on Dow’s new GMO 2,4-D-tolerant soybeans.
Some of the 20,000+ documents in this
repository have surfaced over the years. Many have never been either read or
publicly written about. The Poison Papers therefore offer a unique opportunity
for researchers, the public and the media to discover much more about what was
known about chemical toxicity, when, and by whom.
Chemical Lowlights — Some of what the
Poison Papers Reveal:
Secrecy – They disclose EPA meeting minutes of a secret high level dioxins
working group that admitted dioxins are extraordinarily poisonous chemicals.
The internal minutes contradict the Agency’s longstanding refusal to regulate dioxins
or set legal limits.
Collusion – They demonstrate EPA collusion with
the pulp and paper industry to “suppress, modify, or delay” the results of the
congressionally-mandated National Dioxin Study, which found high levels of
dioxins in everyday products, such as baby diapers and coffee filters, as well
as pulp and paper mill effluents.
Deception – They provide important new data on
the infamous Industrial Bio-Test (IBT) scandal. By the late 1970s, it was known
that more than 800 safety studies performed by IBT on 140 chemicals produced by
38 chemical manufacturers were nonexistent, fraudulent, or invalid. The Poison
Papers, however, show that EPA and its Canadian counterpart, the Health
Protection Branch (HPB), colluded with pesticide manufacturers, to keep
invalidly registered products on the market and covered up problems with many
IBT tests.
Cover-up – The papers also show that EPA staff had evidence that this IBT scandal
involved more independent testing companies and more products than ever officially
acknowledged.
Concealment – The papers show that EPA concealed
and falsely discredited its own studies finding high levels of dioxin – 2,3,7,8-TCDD – in environmental samples and human
breast milk following routine use of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T (Agent Orange) by the
federal Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management.
Intent – They show Monsanto chief medical officer George Roush admitted under
oath to knowing that Monsanto studies into the health effects of dioxins on
workers were written up untruthfully for the scientific literature such as to
obscure health effects. These fraudulent studies were heavily relied upon by
EPA to avoid regulating dioxin. They also were relied upon to defend
manufacturers in lawsuits brought by veterans claiming damages from exposure to
Agent Orange.
~~~
(1) Evaggelos
Vallianatos a publié un article intitulé THE SWAMP le 4 août 2017 (HUFFPOST). À noter qu’il a travaillé pour
l’EPA. Full article:
Excerpts
Let’s
assume you are interested in public and environmental health. Let’s assume further
you accidentally enter a huge laboratory in suburban America. The receptionist
is a chemist. She informs you the lab has been testing all kinds of chemicals,
including pesticides and drugs to make certain these chemicals don’t cause
unreasonable harm to people and the environment. You ask the receptionist who
founded the lab and she cheerfully recites that a distinguished biochemist from
an ivy university came up with the idea to satisfy government demands for
safety. Then the receptionist leaves you alone, telling you to wait to talk to
one of the scientists who knows more about the lab.
You wait but no one shows up. You decide to
explore the place. You enter a large room with the infrastructure of a lab:
tables loaded with knives, glass tubes, chemicals, and equipment for operations
and pathology studies. You immediately react, wishing to get out of the room.
An awful stench is hanging in the air. A broken water sprinkler is throwing
water over cages full of mice, rats, and dogs. Rats are running into a swamp:
water mixed with animal excrement covering the floor. Then, astonishingly, you
see a technician holding a canister of sleeping gas running after rats. You
back off in horror and reenter the reception room where the calm receptionist
is on the phone calling the police for an intruder, you.
This could be the beginning of a science
fiction drama: madmen running a dangerous lab funded by the government and
industry.
However,
this is no science fiction at all. It happened in a series of large facilities
known as Industrial Biotest headquartered in Northbrook, Illinois. The time IBT
did its dirty work covered most of the years from the 1950s to the 1970s. [...]
But testing pesticides and other chemicals
at IBT was primarily a fraudulent affair. The lab had the appearance of a
scientific testing facility. In fact, it was a swamp of filth and corruption.
It had nothing to do with science. The animals were the front. The scientists
were the props.
The animals ate feed poisoned by the
chemical seeking government approval. However, it did not matter what the
poisoned food did to the animals. The technicians-scientists doing the testing
simply trashed the animals that developed tumors, cancer, or other disease.
Then the technicians speeded up the execution of the studies by making up data.
[...]
This story of fraudulent testing
explains the unreliability of company evidence in support of their “registered”
(approved) pesticides. The swamp tradition of testing pesticides continues to
this day.
EPA shut IBT down in 1983. EPA also shut
down several other IBT-like labs.
But what EPA did not shut down was the fraud
behind IBT. [...] EPA has been
ranking pesticides more important than public and environmental health.
For example, Monsanto’s best-selling weed
killer glyphosate came out of the IBT swamp. This is something I did not know
while serving at EPA. I learned about it from a stream of Monsanto documents
that saw the light of the day because so many people have been suing Monsanto
for cancer from exposure to glyphosate. [...]
Monsanto has been making so much money from
glyphosate that it has become paranoid and immoral in its defense of
glyphosate. Yet, lucidity sometimes prevails and the truth comes out. [...]
Roundup is a carcinogen. It includes
glyphosate, carcinogens like formaldehyde, and other chemicals, some of which
may be more toxic than the IBT-tested glyphosate. The pesticides law classifies
these toxic materials as “inerts.” [...]
Drain the swamp – now. No more deception, cover-up
and collusion. ...
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