The Arkansas State Plant Board advanced a proposal prohibiting use of dicamba weed killers from April 16 to Oct. 31, 2018, after farmers reported that soybeans and other crops were damaged when the herbicide drifted away from where it was sprayed this summer.
Chemical companies have blamed damage to crops that cannot tolerate dicamba on farmers misusing the chemical.
Specialists, though, have said the weed killers are risky because they can vaporize and drift across fields after they are sprayed on dicamba-resistant soybeans or cotton developed by Monsanto. That process, known as volatility, occurs more often in high temperatures, according to experts.
In July, Arkansas banned dicamba use for 120 days.
Ty Vaughn, Monsanto’s vice president of global regulatory, said volatility is not a problem and that science did not support the plant board’s decision.
“All options are on the table” for Monsanto’s next move, he added.
mehr:
- Arkansas one step from ban on controversial herbicide next summer (Tom Polansek, Reuters, 22.09.2017)
siehe auch:
- Business: This miracle weed killer was supposed to save farms. Instead, it’s devastating them. (Caitlin Dewey, Washington Post, 29.08.2017)
- Herbizid Dicamba: Ist Monsanto schuld an der US-Pflanzenkrise? (Tagesspiegel, 10.08.2017)
- Glyphosat: Datenmasseure bei der Arbeit (Bernd Schröder, Telepolis, 27.04.2017)
- Roundup Ready v2.0 (Bernd Schröder, Telepolis, 25.11.2016)
- Gerichtsprozess gegen Monsanto: Medien verweigern Berichterstattung (Post, 24.08.2015)
- Superweeds als Symbol für den entfesselten Kapitalismus (Post, 29.05.2015)
- Hawaii: Rote Karte für Monsanto & Co (Post, 06.11.2014)
- Monsanto? Brauchen wir nicht (Post, 29.04.2009)
- Bush & Monsanto (Post, 16.03.2008)- Monsanto, mit Gift und Genen (Post, 12.03.2008)
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