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Thursday, 8 August, 2002, 09:18 GMT 10:18 UK
Six Forum: Pesticides
Much of the fruit and vegetables in UK supermarkets contains potentially harmful pesticide residues, campaigners warn. The supermarket chain Somerfield chain came out worst in the Friends on the Earth study, which showed 60% of its fruit and vegetables contained the residues. But Somerfield said all its products were within UK safety guidelines. Pesticides commonly found in supermarket foods include substances suspected of interfering with the hormone and nervous systems. Friends of the Earth is calling for the use of the most dangerous pesticides to be phased out, and an eventual move to pesticide-free food. What are the health risks of eating food treated with pesticides? What are the alternatives to pesticides? Sandra Bell of Friends of The Earth answered your questions in a LIVE forum for the BBC's Six O'clock news, presented by Manisha Tank.
You've been sending in your questions and your comments on the subject and I'm going to put them to Sandra Bell who is a real food campaigner for Friends of the Earth. Sandra, thanks for being with us. We've had a huge response to the subject. Steve Wexler, London asks: If a man eats an apple every day for 70 years how much pesticide is in his system? Lara, London: Is it true that most pesticides are not water-soluble so it makes no difference if you wash fruit and vegetables before you eat them?
In the latest figures that were published today, there did seem to be a decline in the residues in apples which is of course good news. But unfortunately still about one-third of the apples sampled contained residues and what we're wanted to see is completely residue free produce. In terms of washing, unfortunately washing doesn't really make an awful lot of difference to pesticide residues. But peeling does reduce some of the residues - it doesn't eliminate all of them because some pesticides are taken up by the whole fruit or vegetable.
Stephen G, Newcastle asks: Shouldn't all food products be labelled with washing/cleaning advice and details of any pesticide residue that may be contaminating them at the time of purchase? This has been a big theme throughout our questions - what about the labelling and why don't we know about this?
We'd also like to see retailers publishing their own testing results more freely and making that information available to customers. At the moment only the Co-op and Marks and Spencer are prepared to do that - they put their results on their websites. The other supermarkets, such as Sainsbury and Tesco, have just said to us that they're not prepared to put that information out to their customers.
Our view is that organic farming needs to improve alongside non-organic farming. We'd like to see the pesticides that organic farmers use replaced as well but that's going to require research and development into finding alternatives to them.
Obviously you've said to us that it's difficult to pin down but there has been suggestions that they can affect hormone levels, for example. Other viewers have written in as to whether pesticides and the use of them and getting them into your body ends up with sperm counts being lower for men, for example. What is the evidence actually showing us?
The sorts of effects which scientists are concerned about - certainly yes, those pesticides which are known to work on the hormone system either by mimicking our natural hormones or blocking the way they work - there is concern that those might be linked with increases in certain types of cancer - like breast cancer. In laboratories studies it has been shown that some of the fungicides that turn up on our fruit and vegetables do reduce sperm counts and affect the sperm quality - so they could be implicated in fertility issues.
We are looking for the same kind of commitment from the other retailers but the best influence that people can have is to basically be shoppers and the supermarkets will respond to their own customers. So do write to them, phone them and say that you don't want pesticides in your food.
Sandra, what do you make of those figures from our straw poll?
One of the problems that happens is that if the company decides to prevent the use of a particular pesticide to make food safer for customers here, the knock-on effect in the exporting country could be that those banned products tend to find their way onto the black market. This happens a lot in developing countries that then it ends up with small farmers - the poorest farmers - buying these banned products on the black market. These products are often not labelled at all, they don't have any instructions and they have even been cases of people thinking that they're medicine and using them as medicine with very dire consequences for their health. The responsibility is double - it is to consumers here but it's also to those farmers that are producing the food.
In terms of forward thinking countries, we certainly find that Sweden has been very forward thinking in its pesticide legislation. It has a system whereby only the safest product for a particular purpose is allowed onto the market. So if a pesticide company comes forward with a product, if there's something already on the market which is less toxic then they will automatically not get approval for that product and we'd like to see that here as well.
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See also:
07 Aug 02 | Health
30 Jul 02 | Science/Nature
19 Jun 02 | Health
16 Sep 99 | Medical notes
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