Support for Endosulfan in Agriculture from India, China and Japan
- Author Dezan Shira
- Published June 27, 2011
- Word count 423
India has earned support in the United Nations from countries such as Japan, South Korea, Bolivia, Oman and China in its efforts to cast aside a recommendation by the UN Environment Program to ban endosulfan, a chemical widely used around the world as an insecticide.
Within India itself, the chemical is subject to a contentious debate. The southern rural states of Kerala and Karnataka have taken the lead in attaining its ban, but both agribusinesses and local farmers seem unwilling as alternatives are costly.
In 2001, the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, an environmental treaty, declared the chemical as a persistent organic pollutant and sought its ban due to its toxicity, potential for bioaccumulation, and its disruptive role in endocrine secretion in humans. It is also moderately harmful for beneficial insects such as honeybees and ladybugs as well as to ones that the chemical is used to destroy.
Already 60 countries, including 27 European and 21 African nations, have banned the chemical, while the United States, Canada and Brazil are phasing out its use. Ten years later, the ongoing conference in Geneva, scheduled to continue until Friday, has raised the issue again.
On Monday, India circulated a paper that urged the recommendation of the environmental review committee be set aside. Its argument rested two premises: the pesticide ban was not based on sound scientific criteria and that the decision to ban was reached not by consensus, as is usual for environmental undertakings, but was conducted by a majority vote and therefore in violation of protocol.
It also argued that the chemicals the committee suggested as alternatives showed POP characteristics, with some even exceeding those of the pesticide, and that endosulfan’s risk profile had not been properly prepared.
Bahrain, Qatar, Jordan and a few others requested that India nix a paragraph from the draft paper, presented on behalf of the Asia-Pacific region, which argued the adverse health effects of endosulfan had not been established.
On Tuesday, India took the lead and insisted on reaching a consensus. Japan came forward with support, and said that complying with a ban required the inclusion of an implementation mechanism which the panel’s recommendations currently lacked.
"The fact that the Stockholm Convention itself does not specifically contain a provision to offer financial or technical assistance was probably lost in the discussions," said Mr R. Hariharan, chairman of International Stewardship Center, who is also attending the meeting.
Many developing countries such as Indonesia and Uganda have raised the issue for financial and technical assistance in the event of an endosulfan ban.
This article was written for the emerging economies blog, 2point6billion.com. The site is contributed to by the China and India business experts at Dezan Shira & Associates.
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