- Results released today from water sampling across four Midwestern states – Illinois, Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota – indicate that the endocrine disrupting pesticide atrazine is still being found in drinking water at levels linked to birth... “These water monitoring results should raise concerns for policymakers, they confirm that atrazine continues to contaminate Midwest drinking water at meaningful levels,” said Emily Marquez, PhD, endocrinologist and staff scientist for Pesticide... Jason Rohr, a scientist from University of South Florida, took a look at industry-funded reviews of the effects of atrazine on fish and frogs, indicators of impacts on human health, and he found: “The industry-funded review misrepresented more... These results should spur state and federal officials to take action and support farmers as they transition away from Syngenta's atrazine, towards safe and healthy farming," said Anita Poeppel, owner of Broad Branch Farm in Central Illinois. ” “Levels of atrazine in our water raise concerns about the health impacts on farmers and communities like mine. That is why scientists are looking again at atrazine, and that is why the EU set water contamination tolerance levels at 0. The best way to ensure rural communities and farmers are protected is to keep atrazine out of their water entirely.
Syngenta, maker of atrazine and the largest pesticide corporation in the world, has actively attempted to suppress science related to atrazine&rsquo. Take action» Please join us in urging EPA to take the current review of atrazine seriously, and to follow the science &mdash. evidence linking atrazine to thyroid cancer, and &ldquo. s own Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) reprimanded the agency for lowballing the cancer risks of atrazine, and no action has been taken. Looking at this same body of evidence EPA somehow found that atrazine is &ldquo. Also highlights the problem of increased exposure to atrazine, and details the corporate shenanigans that keep a chemical known to pose serious health risks still on the market. whether or not atrazine causes cancer.
Everyone was frustrated with our bottled water service because of the plastic bottles and ridiculous inefficiency of trucking water around, but didn’t want to give up the clean, hot and cold water. These folks installed a machine that connects to the building water line, then purifies and heat and cools water.
Entine called out Mother Jones But what caught my eye about Entine's post in the first place is that his name had shown up in a recent report by the Center for Media and Democracy ( part one , part two ) about the efforts of Syngenta, the globe's... An email dated August 28, 2009 (PDF) from ACSH's executive director to his "Syngenta friends" refers to the "general operating support Syngenta has been so generously providing over the years, which we request to continue at current or increased... A similar move by the EPA would cut into Syngenta's profits in the United States, where atrazine sells briskly as an herbicide for our massive corn crop. " Pointing to what it called "strong" epidemiological evidence linking atrazine to thyroid cancer, the panel states that the agency is currently acting with "inadequate information to assess carcinogenic potential. Entine, who describes himself as an "author, think tank scholar, leadership and sustainability consultant, media commentator, and public speaker on the DNA of human behavior," accused Slater of blatantly overstating the dangers of atrazine, which... According to Entine, as it's currently used on American fields, atrazine poses no risks to people or farms. The ACSH email to Syngenta stated that "separate and distinct" from Syngenta's.