Monsanto accused of ghostwriting safety studies

Published online: Mar 30, 2017 News
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Recently unsealed court documents indicate Monsanto employees and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) pesticide regulators were in communication regarding the safety of glyphosate, according to the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting.

“In an email, a Monsanto executive named William Heydens proposed that the company ghostwrite parts of a 2013 study in order to keep costs down, having researchers just edit the study and sign their names to it. The “more palatable” tactic had worked in an earlier study published in 2000 by internationally recognized experts Gary Williams, Robert Kroes and Ian Munro, Heydens added,” reports the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting.

Questions concerning the safety of the chemical abound, only heightened by these accusations. In 2015, an arm of the World Health Organization found glyphosate to be “probably carcinogenic.” This claim has been refuted by several other regulatory entities, including the EPA.

Source: www.agprofessional.com