• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Satanica

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-agriculture-herbicide-arkansas-a7919861.html
[....]
The damage here in northeast Arkansas and across the Midwest - sickly soybeans, trees and other crops - has become emblematic of a deepening crisis in American agriculture.

Farmers are locked in an arms race between ever-stronger weeds and ever-stronger weed killers.

The dicamba system, approved for use for the first time this spring, was supposed to break the cycle and guarantee weed control in soybeans and cotton. The herbicide - used in combination with a genetically modified dicamba-resistant soybean - promises better control of unwanted plants such as pigweed, which has become resistant to common weed killers.

The problem, farmers and weed scientists say, is that dicamba has drifted from the fields where it was sprayed, damaging millions of acres of unprotected soybeans and other crops in what some are calling a man-made disaster. Critics contend that the herbicide was approved by federal officials without enough data, particularly on the critical question of whether it could drift off target.

Government officials and manufacturers Monsanto and BASF deny the charge, saying the system had worked as Congress designed it.

The backlash against dicamba has spurred lawsuits, state and federal investigations, and one argument that ended in a farmer's shooting death and related murder charges.
[....]
Herbicide-resistant weeds are thought to cost US agriculture millions of dollars per year in lost crops.

After the Environmental Protection Agency approved the updated formulation of the herbicide for use this spring and summer, farmers across the country planted more than 20 million acres of dicamba-resistant soybeans, according to Monsanto.

But as dicamba use has increased, so too have reports that it “volatilises,” or re-vaporises and travels to other fields. That harms nearby trees, such as the dogwood outside of Blytheville, as well as nonresistant soybeans, fruits and vegetables, and plants used as habitats by bees and other pollinators.

According to one 2004 assessment, dicamba is 75 to 400 times more dangerous to off-target plants than the common weed killer glyphosate, even at very low doses. It is particularly toxic to soybeans - the very crop it was designed to protect - that haven't been modified for resistance.

Kevin Bradley, a University of Missouri researcher, estimates that more than 3.1 million acres of soybeans have been damaged by dicamba in at least 16 states, including major producers such as Iowa, Illinois and Minnesota. That figure is probably low, according to researchers, and it represents almost 4 percent of all US soybean acres.

“It's really hard to get a handle on how widespread the damage is,” said Bob Hartzler, a professor of agronomy at Iowa State. “But I've come to the conclusion that [dicamba] is not manageable.”

The dicamba crisis comes on top of lower-than-forecast soybean prices and 14 straight quarters of declining farm income. The pressures on farmers are intense.

One Arkansas man is facing murder charges after he shot a farmer who had come to confront him about dicamba drift, according to law enforcement officials.
[....]
The new formulations of dicamba were approved on the promise that they were less risky and volatile than earlier versions.

Critics say that the approval process proceeded without adequate data and under enormous pressure from state agriculture departments, industry groups and farmers' associations. Those groups argued that farmers desperately needed the new herbicide to control glyphosate-resistant weeds, which can take over fields and deprive soybeans of sunlight and nutrients.

Such weeds have grown stronger and more numerous over the past 20 years - a result of herbicide overuse. By spraying so much glyphosate, farmers inadvertently caused weeds to evolve resistant traits more quickly.

The new dicamba formulations were supposed to attack these resistant weeds without floating to other fields.
[....]
Field tests by researchers at the Universities of Missouri, Tennessee and Arkansas have since found that the new dicamba herbicides can volatilise and float to other fields as long as 72 hours after application.

Regulators did not have access to much of this data. Although Monsanto and BASF submitted hundreds of studies to the EPA, only a handful of reports considered volatility in a real-world field setting, as opposed to a greenhouse or a lab, according to regulatory filings. Under EPA rules, manufacturers are responsible for funding and conducting the safety tests the agency uses to evaluate products.

And although pesticide-makers often supply new products to university researchers to conduct field tests in varied environments, Monsanto acknowledged it did not allow that testing on its commercialised dicamba because it did not want to delay registration, and scientists said BASF limited it.

Frustrated scientists say that allowed chemical companies to cherry-pick the data available to regulators.

“Monsanto in particular did very little volatility field work,” said Jason Norsworthy, an agronomy professor at the University of Arkansas who was denied access to test the volatility of Monsanto's product.
[....]
Manufacturers says that volatility is not to blame. In a statement, BASF spokeswoman Odessa Patricia Hines said the company brought its dicamba product to market “after years of research, farm trials and reviews by universities and regulatory authorities.”

Scott Partridge, Monsanto's vice president of global strategy, thinks some farmers have illegally sprayed older, more volatile dicamba formulations or used the herbicide with the wrong equipment.

The company, which invested $1 billion in dicamba production plants last year, has deployed a fleet of agronomists and climate scientists to figure out what went wrong.

“We're visiting every grower and every field,” Partridge said. “If there are improvements that can be made to this product, we're going to do it.”

Regulators in the most-affected states are also taking action. In July, Arkansas banned spraying for the remainder of the season and raised the penalties on illegal applications.

Missouri and Tennessee have tightened their rules on dicamba use, while nearly a dozen states have complained to the EPA.

The agency signalled in early August that it might consider taking the new dicamba herbicides off the market, according to several scientists who spoke to regulators.
[....]
There are also early indications that dicamba may not work for long. Researchers have shown that pigweed can develop dicamba resistance within as few as about three years. Suspected instances of dicamba-resistant pigweed have been found in Tennessee and Arkansas.

A spokeswoman for Monsanto said the company was “not aware of any confirmed instances of pigweed resistance” to dicamba.

Some critics of chemical-intensive agriculture have begun to see the crisis as a parable - and a prediction - for the future of farming in the United States. Scott Faber, a vice president at the Environmental Working Group, says farmers have become “trapped on a chemical treadmill” driven by the biotech industry. Many farmers say they think they could not continue farming without new herbicide technology.

“We're on a road to nowhere,” said Nathan Donley, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity.
[....]
 
There's your problem right there.o_O
All they had to do was look at Obamacare and they would have seen that Congress can't make anything that works. Of course, the companies and all the organizations are so busy filling the pockets of the folks in Congress that there is no way they can hear the truth.
 
REal sucky thing is these farmers are paying out the ass for the right to use and plant these "super crops" made by these scumbag corporations.
 
I've said it a million times and I'll say it again..Fuck Monsanto! Dupont too...Those evil bastards don't give a fuck about anything but cash..Same goes for big Pharma..Lately I've been wondering why people go gun crazy in Walmart and churches when they could do the world some good and go blast some of those assholes....
 
TPTB are doing a great job of deflecting blame, aren't they. I don't understand why people don't get it.
 
the lies that have been pushed on the innocent public are audacious.
the supposed benefits of GMOs are nonexistent.
the actual damages from this kind of irresponsible technology are at best deadly and at worst incomprehensible.

but we do live in exciting times, don't we! *tries to look at the bright side
i'm tired of waiting for it though... i just want someone to push the big red button already.
 
We are destroying valuable farm land...no doubt about it.

What I don't get is why don't we open Hydroponic Growth centers?
You can grow tomato's on level 1, heads of lettuce on level 2 and so on.
You can have these Hydroponic Centers all over the country. Things that cannot be hydroponically grown could be grown on land that is properly taken care of, left to lie fallow for a season or whatever is required.

No offense to farmers.
 
I know a farmer that is being sued for growing their round up ready soy beans. He is growing seed that has been passed down through generations in his family. His neighbor 3 farms over is growing Monsanto's shit. Those assholes went on private property without asking. Took samples and are now suing him. The only thing he can figure is that some seed blew out of his neighbors truck and contaminated a little bit of his field. Now he has to hire a lawyer, have a few independents come out and take samples to be tested. All on his dime with money he doesn't have.

That's how they are killing agriculture. Assaulting the working man with billion dollar lawyers and cash grinding them into submission.
 
I know a farmer that is being sued for growing their round up ready soy beans. He is growing seed that has been passed down through generations in his family. His neighbor 3 farms over is growing Monsanto's shit. Those assholes went on private property without asking. Took samples and are now suing him. The only thing he can figure is that some seed blew out of his neighbors truck and contaminated a little bit of his field. Now he has to hire a lawyer, have a few independents come out and take samples to be tested. All on his dime with money he doesn't have.

That's how they are killing agriculture. Assaulting the working man with billion dollar lawyers and cash grinding them into submission.
and on the flipside, what recourse do innocent farmers have when monsatans seeds get spread onto THEIR land?!? i fucking hate monsanto, or whatever they changed their name into now.
 
Big Ag has found a way to make genetically modified seeds permanent, by quietly writing in “preemptive seed laws” at the state level. In twenty-nine states, men and women at the local level will no longer be able to discuss, debate, or propose laws on the use of genetically modified seeds. The people will not have any voice in their individual cities and municipalities to protect their fields, crops, property, and water from biotech experimentation.

And that pretty much says it all.
 
Then we'll put up greenhouses. Of course, my city has probably put those on the forbidden list along with chickens and ducks. Not that it would stop me.
 
Back
Top