Pesticide Residues in Europe

Europe has one of the strictest limits for pesticide residue on fruits and vegetables. Environmentalists sometimes refer to it as the standard all countries should aspire to achieve. Many people would be surprised to know that in fact there is increasing evidence Europe has a serious problem with pesticide residues.

While this post is specific to Europe, it would not surprise me to find that most countries in the world have similar problems for similar reasons.

Combinations

Of course all pesticides go through a testing phase as part of their development, to determine their safety as well as establish safe levels of exposure to the environment, farm workers and consumers. One of the major weaknesses of this testing is combinations are never considered.

Pesticides are often classified according to the nature of their toxicity, for example you have neurotoxins, carcinogens and hormones. What happens when you combine a neurotoxin with a hormone? Two different carcinogens with a neurotoxin? This is never considered when testing pesticides, not for people or the environment.

Grapes for example are one of the most pesticide intensive crops, and 35 different pesticides are commonly used when growing them. For oranges, this number is 49.

In a test performed November 2004, Dutch consumer web site Weet Wat Je Eet (know what you’re eating) tested 30 samples of supermarket grapes and 42% of them had higher than allowed levels of detectable pesticides. They found an average of 4.3 pesticides in each sample, and a maximum of 12 in any one sample. The worst scoring supermarkets seemed to be mostly discounted German chains like PLUS. In other tests, chains Aldi and Lidl have also scored poorly on pesticide residues. To be fair, there were certainly other supermarket chains from other countries that scored poorly as well.

Testing for Residues

One of the problems is testing for these residues in the EU is at a very minimal level. Very much the ‘what we don’t know can’t hurt us’ attitude is taken.

When testing is performed, it is extremely unusual for more than one pesticide to be tested for at a time. That means if a farm uses 35 different pesticides to grow their grapes, if it is tested it will only be for one arbitrary pesticide, and if it passes this test the grapes are considered to be within EU pesticide residue limits.

The only wide spread testing I’m aware of, for multiple pesticides, is done by consumer organizations after the fruits and vegetables are on sale at the supermarket.

Centralized Processing and Distribution

It’s simply the nature of nearly all of our food that it comes from more than one source and goes through a centralized processing system somewhere. If you buy a liter of milk it doesn’t come from one cow. Farmers from many places combine the milk from all of their cows into one vat, which is then packaged for retail sale and distributed to supermarkets. The same thing is certainly true with our fruits and vegetables.

Not only does this distribution system more or less guarantee any contamination is spread through the entire system, but it makes the idea of testing for only one pesticide residue seem all that much more ridiculous. If testing for one pesticide is done on a particular farm or in a particular country, and tests for a different one are performed someplace else, after the products are combined clearly no meaningful testing has been done.

This distribution system nearly guarantees if 35 different pesticides are commonly used to grow grapes, and you buy a bottle of wine, it will almost certainly contain traces of all 35 pesticides.

Subsidies and Eastern Europe

Until recently almost no pesticides were used in the the former Soviet Block countries now in the EU. In the last few years the agricultural subsidies to these countries has increased sharply, and is apparently encouraging increased pesticide use. Tests performed on products coming from these countries show steadily increasing pesticide residues.

Another problem with subsidies is the trend in toward decreasing direct payment to farmers, but at the same time often different subsidies are available for things like pesticides. If a farmer finds him- or herself in a situation where highly discounted pesticides are available, and their use may result in even a small increase in crop yields, they may be tempted to use them much more intensively.

Certified Organic

If you really must shop at the supermarket, and think the way to address the problem of pesticides is to throw money at it, then buying certified organic products is always an option. By choosing certified organic products, you are supporting large farms at the expense of small ones. You are also not avoiding the problems of centralized processing and distribution, and since the use of ‘organic’ pesticides is often allowed you frequently don’t eliminate all of the environmental damage caused by traditional pesticides or all of the risks to your health. Certified organic food is also often among the most energy intensive food available. Organic standards are increasingly becoming watered down and less meaningful, and this trend looks set to continue. But if you must, this is a possible way to reduce your exposure to pesticides.

When you go to the store and buy certified organic products, you should think of yourself the same as a tourist from a rich country visiting a less developed one with a big pocket book. Unwilling to learn and adapt to local ways and customs, and insisting instead on spending lots of money to achieve the same standard of living you enjoy at home. By spending lots of money on certified organic foods, to avoid thinking about and becoming more connected with what you eat, you are simply cheating yourself and avoiding the experience of eating truly high quality foods. By promoting certified organic food to all of your family and friends, you doing little more than acting as a spokesperson for large agricultural interests.

What Can You Really Do?

Grow your own fruits and vegetables.

Buy locally grown products from people you trust.

Choose fruits and vegetables that aren’t usually grown with a lot of pesticides, in particular:

Avocado
Kiwi
Plums
Passion Fruit
Mango
Black Currant
Cherries
Fennel
Asparagus
Belgian Endive
Red Cabbage
Green Cabbage
Cauliflower
Mushrooms

Avoid ones that are normally high in pesticides:

Mandarins/Clementines
Lemons
Grapefruit
Oranges
Grapes
Currants
Apples
Lettuce
Hot Peppers/Bell Peppers
Endive
Stalk Celery

Contact your EU Agricultural Ministers, possibly through local organizations. If you are in Holland, follow the link above to Weet Wat Je Eet. Tell these politicians we need meaningful testing of pesticide levels, and foods that exceed them should be promptly removed from the market.

In case you thought we all lived in a democracy and your opinion mattered, think again. Apparently our European MPs don’t want the pressure of public opinion so votes on these matters are generally taken in secret. Secret parliamentary votes are undemocratic. Be sure to tell your politicians they should make their positions public so it’s clear who can be supported in future elections. Silence means they can’t be supported.

Asian parasite killing Western bees

Spanish scientists claim to have found a very important clue behind Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), the mysterious problem beekeepers in many countries have been having.

According to this article in Reuters Spanish scientists have discovered a parasite common in Asian bees is now infecting bees in large parts of Europe and the Americas. Asian bees apparently have a high degree of natural resistance to this microscopic parasite, so it’s not normally a problem there.

European Pesticide Watch

I’m sorry for all of you reading this outside of the European Union, this doesn’t really apply to you.

There is a Dutch language article on the subject here.

For you Europeans, there is an important vote coming up on Tuesday in the EU parliament on the issue of pesticide use in Europe. For Holland this is a very important issue, because there is a great deal of pollution caused by agricultural poisons. A large percentage of these pesticides are used by the flower industry in order to grow blemish free cut flowers and flower bulbs for export. These pesticides are of course different than what is used for food, and have different criteria for safety.

These pesticides are polluting the surface water, meaning drinking water has to come from deeper and deeper wells, a process that can’t continue forever.

Holland also has many important and fragile ecosystems that are kept under constant stress by the use of these chemicals.

The upcoming vote, this Tuesday 17 July, is for a series of amendments to an already agreed upon resolution. Among other things these measures call for a 50% reduction in pesticide use in the next 10 years (amendment 119), creation of a new pesticide tax (amendment ITRE 2) and allocation of money for organic agriculture (amendment 287).

A secret vote on these measures is planned! In case some of you thought we lived in a democracy that was sensitive to the wishes of the people, apparently in this case they don’t want the pressure of public opinion. As well as encouraging your representatives to support these measures, please also encourage them to voluntarily make their votes public so it’s clear who should be supported in the next elections.

Choosing a Wine for it’s Biodiversity

This is something I’ve been meaning to post about for a while now.

Many people think having a real cork stopper in a bottle of wine is wasteful and destructive to the environment because the trees cork are harvested from are endangered, and so choosing plastic over cork protects these trees. Nothing could be further from the truth!

In fact harvesting the cork from these trees causes little or no damage, and without the demand for wine corks these trees will be removed so the land can be used for other purposes.

Wine makers don’t like real corks because a small percentage of their wines go bad, something that doesn’t happen with plastic corks or metal caps.

Choose for biodiversity! Choose for a real wine cork instead of plastic corks or screw on caps! It makes for a nicer bottle of wine too.

For more information see this article on The Star.

Permaculture is the New Organic

Permaculture is a term introduced in the 1970’s, but is being talked about more and more. I think we are going to hear even more about it in the coming months and years.

I recently posted about the term ‘organic’ being rendered irrelevant by large scale agriculture and food companies, and permaculture may soon replace this term.

Permaculture is not so much a set of rules as it is a philosophy. It’s about doing things in a way that are low impact to the environment as well as minimizing inputs and outputs. Inputs and outputs are minimized by reusing waste as much as possible and designing systems that are self-sustaining and don’t require inputs of energy, chemicals or natural resources.

For many of us this is nothing new. It’s how we have been gardening and living our lives for a long time now. It is however useful to have a term and a way to formalize and discuss it. In this way we can all improve the way we do things, and help each other at the same time.

Expect to hear this word a lot more on this blog! If you’re interested in a longer and more detailed discussion of these principles, Wikipedia has an article on it here.