Onderzoekers van de Wereldbank, Dasgupa en anderen, hebben
nu gegevens verzameld en geanalyseerd over het risicobesef bij de gebruikers,
hun spuitgedrag, en de invloed van de bestrijdingsmiddelen op hun gezondheid.
Het onderzoek biedt een eenvoudige, hanteerbare methodologie
om de ergste misstanden in ontwikkelingslanden te herkennen. Ook besteden zij
aandacht aan een mogelijke overschakeling naar veiliger productiemethoden.
Toxic Pollution from Agriculture - An
Emerging Story
In recent decades, the indiscriminate use
of agricultural pesticides has created very serious health and environmental
problems in many developing countries.
One to five million farm workers are
estimated to suffer pesticide poisoning every year (WHO, UNEP) and at least
20,000 die annually from exposure, many of them in developing countries.
November 28, 2006 “Despite the enormity of the problem, surveys of pesticide
use have been few and far between, and much of the information to date has been
mostly anecdotal,” says World Bank economist Susmita Dasgupta, who has been
working to fill this gap in Bangladesh and Vietnam.
Dasgupta and a team of researchers in the
World Bank’s Development Research Group have assembled and analyzed detailed
survey data from these countries on the risk perceptions of pesticide users,
their pesticide-handling behavior, and the effects of pesticides on their
health.
The research offers simple, hands-on methodology to identify toxic hotspots in
any developing country in the absence of detailed information on pesticide use.
In addition, it analyzes the potential adoption of safer production methods.
Evidence from Bangladesh: Too much use, too
little protection
In a recent survey of 820 boro (winter
rice), potato, bean, eggplant, cabbage, sugarcane and mango farmers in Bangladesh, more than 47 percent of
farmers were found to use more pesticides than needed to protect their crops.
With only four percent of farmers formally
trained in pesticide use or handling, and over 87 percent freely admitting that
they used little or no protective measures while applying pesticides, overuse
is potentially a very threatening problem to farmer health as well as the
environment.
Overuse in Bangladesh is significantly explained by varying misperceptions of health
hazards, income, farm ownership, the toxicity of chemicals used, crop
composition, and geographical location.
Farmers identified pesticide traders as one
of their main sources of information. However, 54 percent of the traders
themselves reported frequent health symptoms commonly associated with acute
pesticide poisoning and 92 percent freely admitted that they did not take any
protective measures while handling pesticides. Clearly, there are large
information gaps in the supply chain of pesticide use.
“But this problem is hardly confined to Bangladesh, where in fact we have been
working with local groups to come up with solutions,” says Dasgupta. “Overuse
and other pesticide-related problems are common in the developing world, though
the extent may vary across countries.”
This research brings to light a range of
policy implications. In Bangladesh, for instance, there is an urgent need to actively promote safer
pesticide use and hygienic practices among people who handle these substances.
Research findings also highlight the need
for policymakers to design effective, targeted outreach programs that address
pesticide risk, safe handling, and protection. The approach should ideally be
participatory, with a view to addressing the most dangerous information gaps.
Overuse is high in specific crops and
regions
Another important finding from Bangladesh, and also Brazil, is that specific crops and
geographic locations experience more overuse than others. For the most
measurable results, interventions should focus on these crops and regions.
Pesticide use in Brazil, for instance, is heavily skewed towards a few cash crops:
soybeans, sugarcane, cotton, fruits and tobacco for export. Policies targeted
towards these crops may help sustainable development in Brazil.
These could include strict enforcement of
existing regulations, farmer education and training, integrated pest management
programs, or research on alternative crop-specific pest control methods.
Evidence from Vietnam: low awareness of severe
health effects among farmers
Information on how pesticides affect health
is quite limited in many developing countries, with many surveys relying solely
on farmers’ self-assessments of their health status.
To test the reliability of self-reported
data, Dasgupta and team conducted an acetyl cholinesterase enzyme (AChE) blood
test for 190 rice farmers in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta.
Results reveal a high prevalence of
pesticide poisoning—more than 35 percent of the tested farmers experienced
acute pesticide poisoning and 21 percent were chronically poisoned.
But the link between symptoms that the
farmers reported and the actual clinical results was very weak. Again, this
study was conducted in Vietnam,
but problems such as this are common across the developing world.
This finding highlights the fact that
farmers are often unable to distinguish the symptoms of pesticide poisoning
from other health problems, and suggests that regular medical checkups and
blood tests should be conducted for those who handle highly or moderately toxic
pesticides.
Also, farmers should be encouraged to
switch to lower-hazard pesticides and use protective gear to reduce individual
health risks.
“Even when individual farmers are careful,
pervasive contamination from others’ pesticide use and persistent pesticide
residues in local water, air and soil may pose significant health risks,” warns
Dasgupta. “Collective measures are an important complement to individual
actions.”
Environmental pollution: not just a
local problem
Chemically polluted runoff from fields has
contaminated surface and ground water, damaged fisheries, and destroyed
freshwater ecosystems. It has also created growing "dead zones" in
parts of oceans close to river mouths that drain agricultural regions.
Local agricultural pollution also has
global effects. For example, toxic compounds from pesticides accumulate in
oceanic food chains. Even the tissues of land mammals in "pristine" polar
regions now contain significant toxic accumulations.
Alternative production methods: what works
Dasgupta and team compare outcomes for
farming with Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and conventional techniques,
using input-use accounting, conventional production functions and frontier
production estimation.
IPM comprises a range of approaches, from
carefully targeted use of chemical pesticides to biological techniques that use
natural parasites and predators to control pests.
Results from Bangladesh suggest that the productivity of IPM rice farming is not
significantly different from the productivity of conventional farming. Since
IPM reduces pesticide costs with no accompanying loss in production, it seems
to be more profitable than conventional rice farming.
Interview results also suggest substantial
health and ecological benefits. However, collective adoption of these methods
is a must. Neighbors’ continued reliance on chemicals to kill pests will also
kill helpful parasites and predators, as well as exposing IPM farmers and local
ecosystems to chemical spillovers from adjoining fields.
Dec 27, 2006
Feature article