Center for Biological Diversity

For Immediate Release, July 25, 2017

Contact: Lori Ann Burd, (971) 717-6405, laburd@biologicaldiversity.org

Sen. Udall Bill Would Ban Brain-damaging Chlorpyrifos

Bill Reverses Trump EPA Approval of Dangerous Pesticide's Ongoing Use

WASHINGTON—  A bill introduced today by Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) would ban use of Dow Chemical's brain-damaging pesticide chlorpyrifos on crops, reversing a Trump Environmental Protection Agency decision to allow ongoing use of the dangerous pesticide. The bill is called the Protect Children, Farmers and Farmworkers from Nerve Agent Pesticides Act of 2017.

Last November the EPA announced a plan to ban use of the pesticide, which has been banned for indoor use for more than 15 years. But in late March EPA chief Scott Pruitt announced he was reversing course and would allow ongoing use of the pesticide.

“In addition to  permanently slowing brain development in children, the EPA has found that chlorpyrifos hurts 97 percent of endangered species,” said Lori Ann Burd, director of the Center for Biological Diversity's environmental health program. “Scott Pruitt's appalling decision to reverse the ban of this dangerous pesticide was nothing but a bow to Dow. We applaud Senator Udall's efforts to ban this dangerous pesticide.”

Around 5 million pounds of chlorpyrifos are used in the United States every year on crops like corn, peanuts, plums and wheat. A recent study at the University of California at Berkeley found that 87 percent of umbilical-cord blood samples tested had detectable levels of chlorpyrifos. Numerous studies have linked it to severe harm to children.

In the weeks following Pruitt's reversal of the chlorpyrifos ban, Dow Chemical reached out to the EPA and expert wildlife agencies urging them to abandon a legally mandated effort to assess the impacts of chlorpyrifos on endangered species and indefinitely delay implementing common sense measures to protect them. 

Dow's back-channel campaign to get the agency to abandon a robust and nearly four-year effort to protect endangered species from these pesticides is revealed in letters in which Dow urges the Trump administration and Pruitt to withdraw “biological evaluations”  finalized in January. Those evaluations, which included opportunities for Dow to weigh in, detail how three highly toxic organophosphate insecticides — chlorpyrifos, malathion and diazinon — harm nearly all 1,800 threatened and endangered animals and plants.

To date expert agencies have missed deadlines for finalizing the evaluations and EPA staffers have confirmed that they are indeed considering Dow's request.

Over the past six years, Dow has donated $11 million to congressional campaigns and political action committees and spent an additional $75 million lobbying Congress. In Dow was one of three companies that donated $1 million to the Trump inauguration.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.3 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

www.biologicaldiversity.org

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