Wave of Opposition Derails EU Bid to Extend Use of Toxic Herbicide
A wave of opposition has slammed the brakes on a plan to re-approve the use of Monsanto’s toxic glyphosate in the European Union as a number of member states, buoyed by growing public outcry, launched a shock rebellion against the proposal.
European Commission leaders met behind closed doors in Brussels on Monday to hold a vote on whether to extend authorization of the use of the weed-killer for 15 years, before its license expires in June.
Advance reporting suggested that the extension is essentially a done-deal. But in the hours before the scheduled vote, leaders from Italy joined Sweden, France, and the Netherlands in a “shock rebellion” against the widely-used herbicide—forcing the Commission to postpone the vote and “reflect” on the plan, according to French representative Alexis Dutertre.
Meanwhile, outside Monday’s hearing, activists dressed in hazmat suits and held signs that read “No to glyphosate on our fields” and “Their profits—our cancers.”
Ahead of the meeting, over 180,000 Europeans signed a petition calling on EU member states and the Commission to ban glyphosate, citing the World Health Organization’s determination that the herbicide is probably carcinogenic for humans.
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