EPA Approves Iodomethane Pesticide Use Despite Scientists' Concerns
54 Scientists Disagree with Pesticide Use
By alex cruden, published Oct 06, 2007
Published Content: 158 Total Views: 57,998 Favorited By: 5 CPs
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The Environmental Protection Agency has announced that it has approved a one-year registration of iodomethane (methyl iodide), a pesticide that is being touted as a substitute for methyl bromide, which is known to deplete ozone. Last month, 54 scientists sent the EPA a letter dissuading the Agency from approving the use of methyl iodide, which the scientists feel is too dangerous to be released into the environment. The EPA sent a response letter to the group of scientists, many of whom are professors at some of the nation's most distinguished universities. In the response, the EPA assures that the new pesticide has undergone extensive testing and peer-review from Agency scientists and the independent Scientific Advisory Panel. The EPA has also stated in an Agency press release that iodomethane has gone through one of the "most thorough analyses ever conducted on a new pesticide." The testing concluded that iodomethane is an effective soil-fumigant and also meets the health and safety standards set by the EPA.
In September, 54 scientists, headed by Robert G. Bergman from the University of California at Berkeley and Roald Hoffman, a Nobel Laureate in Chemistry and a professor at Cornell University, sent a letter opposing the registration of iodomethane. In that letter, the group of scientists writes they are "perplexed that U.S. EPA would even consider the introduction of a chemical like methyl iodide into agricultural use. The Agency has spent a great deal of effort to reduce industrial toxic emissions from chemical manufacturing plants. It is astonishing then that the Office of Pesticide Programs is working to legalize broadcast releases of one of the more toxic chemicals used in manufacturing into the environment."

EPA Approves Iodomethane Pesticide Use Despite Scientists' Concerns
Date: October 5, 2007Washington, DC USAYou may also like...
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Takeaways
- Iodomethane is considered to be a highly dangerous chemical by most scientists.
- The group of scientists that are against the use of iodomethane includes 3 Nobel Laureates.
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