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Old 13-06-2013, 10:44 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
mogga mogga is offline
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Default Weed killer traces in nine of 10 urine samples of people in Malta

On Thu, 13 Jun 2013 10:24:30 +0100, David Hill
wrote:


Nine out of 10 urine samples from people in Malta contained traces of
the weed killer glyphosate, laboratory tests carried out by Friends of
the Earth Malta show.

The results in Malta are mirrored in results across Europe – with 45 per
cent of samples from the 10 volunteers in each of the18 countries found
to contain traces of the chemical.


90% in Malta,
45% elsewhere? What sort of mirror are they using?

Where does the water on Malta come from?
http://www.bgs.ac.uk/research/ground...ity/Malta.html




All volunteers who gave samples live in urban areas, and none had
handled or used glyphosate products in the run up to the tests. This is
the first time monitoring has been carried out across Europe for the
presence of the weed killer in humans.

Because of the small sample, lifestyle conditions will not form any type
of conclusion.

Glyphosate is one of the most widely-used weed killers in the world,
used by farmers, local government and gardeners, as well as being
sprayed extensively on some genetically modified crops imported into
Europe for use as animal feed.

The biggest producer is Monsanto which sells it under the brand name
“Roundup”. Despite its widespread use, its presence in food or water is
rarely monitored by governments.

Martin Galea De Giovanni from Friends of the Earth Malta said:

“Most people will be worried to discover that there is weed killer in
their bodies and will want to know why it is there and what effects it
is having. These results suggest that we are being exposed to glyphosate
in our everyday lives, yet we don’t know where it is coming from, how
widespread it is in the environment, or what it is doing to our bodies.

“This is the most widely used weed killer in Europe and it is surprising
that public authorities rarely test our food or water for it. Now that
Friends of the Earth Malta has discovered that it is widespread in
people’s bodies, it is asking the Maltese Government to immediately
step-up their monitoring to make sure we are not being put at risk.”

The latest National Statistics Office figures for herbicide use (2007)
show a possible increase in glyphosate usage in Malta (as compared to
2005). The high rates obtained from the Maltese sample demands an even
more serious investigation into the source of these herbicides, FoE said.

Fourteen glyphosate-resistant genetically modified crops are currently
waiting for approval for cultivation in the European Union. Some
estimates suggest that if given the go-ahead, glyphosate use could
increase by as much as 800 per cent.

See
https://www.bund.net/fileadmin/bundn...in_analyse.pdf

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