|

For Immediate Release: May 11, 2009
Contacts:
, American Bird Conservancy, 202/234-7181 ext. 216
EPA Bans Deadly Pesticide
Responsible for Millions of Bird Deaths
(Washington, D.C.) The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) today announced its final decision
to revoke all food tolerances for the highly toxic pesticide
carbofuran, which is sold under the name "Furadan"
by FMC Corporation. The agency’s announcement confirms
a proposed action first announced in July 2008. FMC Corp.
will have the opportunity to challenge the decision within
90 days with a petition to stay the rule. When the rule becomes
final, EPA will proceed with the cancellation of registration
for all uses of the pesticide.
“Carbofuran
causes neurological damage in humans, and one of the most
deadly pesticides to birds left on the market. It is responsible
for the deaths of millions of wild birds since its introduction
in 1967, including Bald and Golden Eagles, Red-tailed Hawks,
and migratory songbirds,” said Dr. George Fenwick, President
of American Bird Conservancy. “This EPA decision marks
a huge victory for wildlife and the environment.”
This rule becomes effective December 31,
2009 to allow for commodities in storage to be used. Most
uses of carbofuran on food crops were voluntarily cancelled
in March 2009, effective immediately, so that most uses of
the pesticide have been cancelled for the 2009 growing season.
Today’s announcement is available at http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/0/30118530d0b774d7852575b30059aa8c?OpenDocument.
In its 2005 ecological risk assessment
on carbofuran, EPA stated that all legal uses of the pesticide
were likely to kill wild birds. If a flock of mallards were
to feed in a carbofuran treated alfalfa field, EPA predicted
that 92% of the birds in the flock would quickly die. EPA
analysis has also confirmed that carbofuran is a threat to
human health through contaminated food, drinking water, and
occupational exposure.
Following objections to the proposed ban
by FMC Corporation, a government Scientific Advisory Panel
reviewed the decision and agreed with EPA in 2008 that the
pesticide poses an unreasonable risk to the environment, particularly
birds, and that there was no evidence to recommend reversing
EPA’s decision to cancel carbofuran.
“Despite overwhelming scientific
evidence of carbofuran's extreme toxicity and the availability
of safer alternatives, FMC Corporation continued to do everything
it could to keep this chemical on the market,” said
, ABC’s Director of Conservation Advocacy.
“We congratulate EPA for standing up for science and
the public interest in the face of an industry pressure campaign.”
Carbofuran first came under fire in the
1980s after an EPA Special Review estimated that over a million
birds were killed each year by the granular formulation. Many
of these die-off incidents followed applications of carbofuran
that were made with extraordinary care. The granular formation
was cancelled in 1994, but the liquid form has remained on
the market.
“The revocation
of all food tolerances has international implications,
as imports of rice, coffee, bananas and sugarcane were previously
allowed to contain residues of carbofuran,” said Dr.
Fry. “After this revocation, countries wishing to export
these foods to the US must stop using carbofuran on these
four major crops.”
Rice and coffee are particularly important,
as many US birds over wintering in Latin America use coffee
and rice fields as winter habitats. American Bird Conservancy
and the Natural Resources Defense Council petitioned EPA to
cancel all import tolerances for pesticide residues on food,
and this decision complies with the ABC/NRDC petition.
Incidents of bird poisonings by carbofuran
are documented in the Avian Incident Monitoring System (www.abcbirds.org/aims)
operated by American Bird Conservancy in cooperation with
the EPA and state and federal wildlife agencies. In addition
to killing birds when used legally, carbofuran is often illegally
used in poison baits intended to kill wildlife in agricultural
areas and grazing lands. This abuse has resulted in the deaths
of raptors including Bald and Golden Eagles in violation of
the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.
### 30 ###
American
Bird Conservancy (ABC) is the only organization that works
solely to conserve native wild birds and their habitats throughout
the Americas. ABC is a not-for-profit membership organization
that is consistently awarded a top, four-star rating by the
independent group Charity Navigator. ABC's Pesticides and
Birds Campaign aims to reduce the exposure of wild birds to
hazardous pesticides. For more information see http://www.abcbirds.org/abcprograms/policy/pesticides/index.html.
|