Leading scientists, doctors and academics call for review of glyphosate ban

12 September 2016 12:00 am

 

We, the undersigned bring to the kind attention of the president and the government of Sri Lanka the need to consider, as a matter of highest priority, lifting the ban on the weed killer glyphosate, in order to save Sri Lanka’s agricultural sector from an unprecedented decline, until at least until such time that an alternative, equally safe and cost-effective weed control method is made available. Glyphosate is the most widely used weed killer in the world. In fact, it is also the most widely used pesticide in the world. It is also one of the least toxic weedicides on the market. In Sri Lanka and in most other countries too, the quantity of glyphosate used far exceeds the total of all other pesticides. The total global use in 2014 was 850,000 metric tonnes. It is highly effective in the control of many noxious weeds, in particular perennial grasses and sedges, which cannot be effectively controlled manually or mechanically. No other weed killer is as effective as glyphosate in this regard. Unfortunately, the government banned the use of glyphosate in the North Central Province and some neighbouring districts afflicted by the chronic kidney disease of uncertain aetiology (CKDu) in 2014 and then banned it in the entire country in 2015, in the mistaken belief that glyphosate has a role in causing CKDu. The subsequent ban has very seriously affected the production of all crops. Of the plantation crops, tea is the most affected, reducing the income of the industry by no less than Rs.14.5 billion.

We rest our case on the following facts: