lunes, 1 de agosto de 2016

Fateful Harvest: Why Brazil has a big appetite for risky pesticides

Fateful Harvest: Why Brazil has a big appetite for risky pesticides

 

Why Brazil has a big appetite for risky pesticides


By Paulo Prada




In this farming superpower, agricultural chemicals - including paraquat – face lax regulation. And in the rural northeast, rampant use has led to sickness and violence.


LIMOEIRO DO NORTE, Brazil – The farmers of Brazil have become the world’s top exporters of sugar, orange juice, coffee, beef, poultry and soybeans. They’ve also earned a more dubious distinction: In 2012, Brazil passed the United States as the largest buyer of pesticides.


This rapid growth has made Brazil an enticing market for pesticides banned or phased out in richer nations because of health or environmental risks.


At least four major pesticide makers – U.S.-based FMC Corp., Denmark’s Cheminova A/S, Helm AG of Germany and Swiss agribusiness giant Syngenta AG – sell products here that are no longer allowed in their domestic markets, a Reuters review of registered pesticides found.


Among the compounds widely sold in Brazil: paraquat, which was branded as “highly poisonous” by U.S. regulators. Both Syngenta and Helm are licensed to sell it here.


Brazilian regulators warn that the government hasn’t been able to ensure the safe use of agrotóxicos, as herbicides, insecticides and fungicides are known in Portuguese. In 2013, a crop duster sprayed insecticide on a school in central Brazil. The incident, which put more than 30 schoolchildren and teachers in the hospital, is still being investigated.

 

CLOUD OF CONTROVERSY: A worker sprays
chemicals at a farm in Brazil's Ceara state. The Latin American power
has emerged as the world's biggest consumer of pesticides as its
agriculture sector booms. REUTERS/Davi Pinheiro