Daily News Archive
EPA Approves
Biological Pesticides for Use in Emergency Exemptions
(Beyond
Pesticides, June 17, 2003) Under a emergency exemption, the
States of Indiana, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, South Carolina and
Utah may now use a multi-ingredient biological pesticide formulation
containing thymol, menthol and eucalyptus to control varroa mites, parasites
capable of destroying whole colonies of honey bees. The agency also
approved an emergency exemption involving lepidopteran pheromone products
to control western poplar clearwing moth for the states of Oregon and
Washington. "Emergency exemptions" refer to Section 18 of
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA),
allowing EPA to permit an exemption under "emergency circumstances"
such as a risk to human health or in cases of possible "significant
economic loss."
"Biopesticides" such as the products that have received the Section 18 exemption differ from traditional, synthetic, chemical pesticides because they are found in nature or are identical to naturally occurring substances. Most biocides are considered to be least or non-toxic and are often recommended as alternatives by Beyond Pesticides.
While environmentalists applaud the use of alternative pest management practices, most view Section 18 as a loophole in FIFRA for using pesticides for unregistered uses and believe the law is often abused. Section 18 allows pesticide manufacturers to sell product year after year for the same pest problem without performing safety and efficacy tests for the exempted uses.
According to EPA's Office of Pesticide Program's 2002 Annual Report, the agency received 503 emergency exemption requests and approved 412 in 2002. Twenty exemption requests were withdrawn and only 13 were denied.
Beyond Pesticides is currently engaged in a major project to document emergency exemption applications and action by EPA under Section 18. Contact Beyond Pesticides for more information.