Press release: HEAL, together with the EDC-Free Europe coalition, is calling on future EU leaders to protect health and the environment from health-harming endocrine-disrupting chemicals. The coalition shared its priorities for the upcoming policy mandate at an event at the European Parliament.
23 April 2019
A new study published today finds a variety of adverse health impacts in second and third generation offspring of rats exposed to glyphosate. It is the first of its kind to look at transgenerational effects and shows how descendants of exposed offspring were more likely to develop prostate, kidney and ovarian diseases, obesity and birth abnormalities [1].
The study suggests that risk assessments need to take into consideration the ability of chemicals to impact future generations through transgenerational effects, instead of only looking at the health impacts of direct exposure [2].
“This study provides alarming new evidence supporting our public health call to take glyphosate off the European market,” says Génon Jensen from the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL). “If a pesticide is showing harm which only occurs generations down the line, surely this is an opportunity for the European Commission to take more precautionary measures to protect our health.”
Glyphosate was reauthorized on the European market for a period of five years in 2017. The European Commission recently appointed France, Hungary, the Netherlands and Sweden to assess whether or not the pesticide should be banned after this time period [3].
The Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) was one of the initiators of the European Citizens’ Initiative to ban glyphosate, which was signed by 1.3 million citizens following the World Health Organization (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)’s assessment that it was a probable carcinogen [4].