In defiance of popular sentiment and scientific warnings, the European Commission plans to re-approve the use of controversial weedkiller glyphosate, a “probable carcinogen” according to the WHO, for another 15 years, according to a draft regulation (pdf) obtained by Bloomberg BNA.
The herbicide, the key ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup, is already so widely used in Europe that two-thirds of bread loaves sold in Britain contain residue from the toxic chemical, the Guardian reported in 2014.
The announcement of the European Commission’s plans, to be voted on at a meeting on March 7th-8th, came on the heels of a report published on Tuesday by the French magazine 60 Millions de Consommateurs, which found traces of glyphosate and other industrial toxins in 5 out of 11 brands of feminine hygiene products.
The Roundup chemical was even discovered in so-called “organic” panty liners made by French feminine product company Organyce. The company has pulled 3,100 boxes of its products from stores in France and Canada “as a precautionary measure” after internal tests confirmed the herbicide’s presence in its products, an Organyce spokesperson told the Independent.
The European Commission’s plans to approve the toxic chemical followed the EU ombudsman’s strong critique (pdf) of the body’s regulatory process, which was published just this week. The commission’s drafted regulation “flew in the face of a censure of the commission by the EU ombudsman,” environmentalists told the Guardian.
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