Pesticides dumped in Benguet farms, waters
>> Friday, September 18, 2015
LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March L. Fianza
As early as the late
90s, pesticide and chemical fertilizer use has been underscored by no less than
a medical practitioner whose hospital in Baguio has always welcomed patients
from the agricultural towns in Benguet and Mountain Province. Through his patients
and after being alarmed by the rising number of farmers getting sick with
cancer, Dr. Charles Cheng launched a research on the effects of pesticides on
farmers in Benguet.
The research work
confirmed that there was indeed a connection between the application of
chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and cancer. Physical and mental
abnormalities in a person that manifested between birth and adulthood were also
blamed on pesticide use. This, in addition to skin diseases, allergy, asthma,
blindness and severe headaches.
This gave rise to the
suspicion that the vegetable-producing towns of Benguet and Mountain Province
became dumping sites of chemical fertilizers and pesticides that are
commercially sold by unscrupulous businessmen who are only after the profit and
care less about the health and environment of their customers.
Farmer-consumers in
Benguet have produced millionaires out of middlemen and local financiers
through the commercial sale of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides that has
become a multi-million peso industry. With this, I am certain that the
pesticide dealer became richer in every sale while the farmer only broke even
or became even poorer.
Thursday last week, I
received a text message from uncle Joseph of PIA informing me of a press conference
about pesticides. I do appreciate what he does and thank him for that. He never
misses sending out invitations through cell phone text messaging to newsmen
based in Baguio about the scheduled press conferences that his office organizes
and coordinates. Kudos.
But wait. There was
one time he did not inform many of a presscon about Holcim’s project. Maybe
there was something to hide away from prying eyes. I could have wanted to ask
if it was true that there was not enough cement supply, reason why construction
of public works was slow. Uncle Joe said he was not there. But weeks later, I
saw his picture with the other guys who were exclusively invited to the press con.
Kudos again.
Back to fertilizers
and pesticides, these are farm inputs that vegetable farmers in Benguet uplands
are enticed with, all because of a perceived increase in production and profit.
So that as one cruises through the Halsema Highway, particularly at Natubleng,
the sharp whiff of pesticides that fly from the cabbages catches the nostrils.
Even with eyes closed, a traveller who passes this route once in a blue moon
can identify a place by the scent in the cool breeze.
On the contrary,
aside from applying the chemicals on vegetable plants, it has been experienced
that pesticides have become eminent threats to human life and livestock. Around
five years ago, the Fertilizers and Pesticides Authority had to stop the sale
of an herbicide that was the prime suspect in the suicide deaths of more or
less 15 “brave souls” in Benguet.
The same has caused
serious damage to crops if used excessively. Pesticides also kill fishes as
chemical residue from the uplands are now found in riverbeds or stick to the
rocks.
Pesticides are in
rivers. Researchers from the University of Koblenz-Landau published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that freshwater sources in the
United States, European Union, Asian countries and Africa are so heavily
contaminated by pesticides that 80 percent of sediment tested at levels that
exceed the maximums set by government regulators.
Governments,
including the Philippines, approves a pesticide by setting the RTL or
"regulatory threshold level". This is the level at which a chemical
will not cause detrimental effects to the environment, especially to humans and
animals, although it is known that synthetic fertilizers and pesticides are
toxic even at their RTL.
Although, government
agencies alleged that pesticide regulation has improved, the same European team
of researchers claimed that newer pesticides exceeded RTLs than the older
pesticides. They said, 40 percent of sediment samples retrieved from the bottom
of the water contained pesticides higher than the allowed level.
The research
concluded that high levels of contamination was widespread as they found almost
no difference in the contamination of waters between poorer African and Asian
countries, and wealthy countries such as the United States, European Union,
Australia, Canada and Japan.
Recently, more than
two metric tons of more than 100,000 empty individual pesticide containers were
collected by pesticide dealers from Benguet farms for proper recycling and
disposal at DENR-accredited facilities in Manila. Good and bad. The recyclable
containers will be made into material for new containers. But imagine the tons
of pesticides that were emptied from these containers and were dumped into the
gardens.
It is good that
agro-chemical companies along with their agents and dealers thought of
collecting their garbage to ensure proper disposal. Although, the better move
is for Benguet to legislate a stop to the sale and distribution of harmful
synthetic farm inputs.
Doing so could
reinforce PD 1144 that bans the use or formulation of pesticides in parts of
the country upon the presentation evidence that the pesticide is an eminent
hazard or is causing widespread serious damage to crops, fish, livestock and
humans.
0 comments:
Post a Comment