In a press release, Mexico’s environmental secretary, Victor Toledo, says the recent resolution gives priority to environmental law, placing it above property and industrial rights because of the potential consequences to biodiversity. He points out that studies have demonstrated that agricultural chemicals such as glyphosate, as well as pesticides, have “many lethal effects on pollinators.”
Toledo is also urging the Mexican government to “promote an agroecological public policy that includes suppressing the harmful environmental, social and cultural effects of modern agriculture.” This would involve the ban of over 100 pesticides as well as glyphosate.
Here in the U.S., where federal officials continue to do nothing about glyphosate, local county and municipal governments are moving ahead with their own plans to phase out and ban the use of glyphosate. In 2017, the Chicago suburb of Naperville announced that its park department would abandon the use of glyphosate in favor of more environmentally-friendly alternatives. This past March, Los Angeles County issued a moratorium on the use of glyphosate. Last August, the Las Cruces, New Mexico city council announced that Roundup would no longer be used for weed control on municipal properties.Source
Related https://shore-215.blogspot.com/search?q=glyphosate
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