NZ Food Still Stacked With Pesticides
New Zealand Food Samples Still Stacked With Pesticide
Residues
26 October
2010
• Pesticide residues found in 93%
of targeted fruit and vege samples
• Prohibited endosulfan again in cucumber samples
• 11 out of 23 Pak choi samples with residues exceeding allowable levels
• 26 different pesticides found among 24 grape samples
• One grape sample containing 10 different pesticides
• Organic fruit & vege free of synthetic pesticides
The Soil & Health Association – Organic NZ and the Pesticide Action Network Aotearoa NZ are calling for an attitude change in New Zealand’s food safety regulators following two very similar pesticide residue result reports in 3 months, and, despite evidence to the contrary, continued assurances that there is no food safety issue.
In the latest results food tested for the New Zealand Food Safety Authority (NZFSA), from 152 samples, just 7% had no pesticide residues and there were 18 examples of residues above Maximum Residue Limits. Foods sampled were bananas, Bok or Pak choi, broccoli, cucumber, grapes, nectarines, oranges and wheat.
Among 22 of 24 grape samples there were 26 different chemicals found with one grape sample containing 10 different residues, another with 8, another 7, four with six, four with 5, six with four different residues, and only two each with 2 or 3 residues. Only 2 grape samples had no detectable residues.
All broccoli, nectarines and oranges contained pesticide residues. Organic produce is not expected to contain any synthetic pesticide residues; however the few grapes and other produce not containing residues were not identified by production method.
“NZFSA is privy to the science proving the danger of pesticides, especially in mixtures, but fails to acknowledge the risks to consumers,” said Soil & Health – Organic NZ spokesperson Steffan Browning.
“Cancers, endocrine disruption, foetal abnormalities, neurological disease and many other conditions have been proven to be associated with pesticides as found in NZFSA residue surveys, yet in the name of trade, NZFSA, Environmental Risk Management Authority (ERMA) and Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) continue to allow unnecessary chemical use and residues.”
“There are organic means of production that do not necessitate use of synthetic chemicals, that also provide more nutritious and safer food than the New Zealand food regulators are supporting. It is time for a new focus on food production and safety.”
“As in the last survey results, the banned chemical endosulfan has once again been found in cucumbers, and half of the Bok and Pak choi samples had illegal residue levels,” said Dr Meriel Watts of Pesticide Action Network Aotearoa New Zealand.
“The countries of the European Union are all embarking on developing national pesticide reduction policies, and once again New Zealand is lagging behind.”
“Despite discussions with the Food Saftey Authority over a number of years, we have not been able to get them to even acknowledge that reducing residues in our food would be a good idea.”
“The EU is also working to find ways of addressing the problem of increased toxicity from exposure to multiple pesticides, yet NZFSA still will not acknowledge that such a thing exists, let alone the need to reduce exposures to multiple chemicals.”
“What will it take for the NZFSA to catch on to the problem? A 93% rate of contamination of our food supply with pesticides is totally unacceptable,” added Dr Watts.
“A fresh approach to food and community safety is needed in New Zealand,” said Mr Browning.
“With continued strong growth in organics internationally, it is time that organic production targets such as in Soil & Health’s Organic 2020 vision, were taken on for the well being of New Zealand’s environmental, economic and human health”
Notes and references further
below.
Latest test samples showing detectable
residues.
Banana 1 of 24
with no detectable residue
Choi 1 of 23
Broccoli 0 of 24
Cucumber 6 of 25
Grapes 2 of 24
Nectarines 0 of 4
Oranges 0 of 24
Wheat 1 of 6
REFERENCES from the 28 July joint media release. All
remain pertinent.
(1) Results can be found on the
NZFSA website at http://www.nzfsa.govt.nz/science/research-projects/food-residues-surveillance-programme/
July 2010 results spreadsheet, season 1 [Excel 59 KB or
through http://www.nzfsa.govt.nz/publications/media-releases/2010/2010-07-26-frsp-results.htm
(2)
Chlorothalonil is a fungicide in the same family as
hexachlorobenzene (HCB) and pentachlorophenol. In New
Zealand, Chlorothalonil is applied to a variety of fruit,
vegetables and ornamentals for the control of various
diseases including among others powdery mildew, blackspot,
botrytis, blight, and leaf spot. It is also used in
antifouling paints and timber antisapstains.
(3)
Lodovici, M. et al 1994,1997 http://tiny.cc/goony or http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6TCN-3RH123D-6&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=935242972&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=c8e96fd36709a6617d101f34322937c4
These results indicate that the toxicity of low doses of
pesticide mixtures present in food might be further reduced
by eliminating diphenylamine and chlorothalonil.
Kortenkamp & Backhaus. 2009. State of the Art Report
on Mixture Toxicity. Final Report .Executive Summary. 22
December 2009.
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/pdf/report_Mixture%20toxicity.pdf
“Scientific research has repeatedly demonstrated that the
effects of mixtures are considerably more pronounced than
the effect of each of its individual components and that
environmental pollution is from chemical mixtures and not
from individual substances. This clearly underlines the need
for dedicated regulatory considerations of the problem of
chemical mixtures.”
(4) http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/about-us/news/article.cfm?mnarticle=female-farm-workers-at-highest-risk-of-leukaemia-15-06-2009
(5) http://checkorphan.getreelhealth.com/grid/news/all/individuals-who-apply-pesticides-are-found-have-double-risk-blood-disorder?from=checkorphan.org
and http://tiny.cc/rgl83 or http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/cgi/content/abstract/113/25/6386?maxtoshow=&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&fulltext=Pesticide+exposure+and+risk+of+monoclonal++&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT
ENDS