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Endosulfan one step closer to global ban

Endosulfan one step closer to global ban

Experts in Geneva agree that endosulfan deserves a world-wide ban. This dangerous and widely used insecticide could be added to the POPs Treaty’s global ban list as early as April of next year.  Learn More»

Living Downstream Film on Tour

Living Downstream Film on Tour

Living Downstream follows ecologist and cancer survivor Sandra Steingraber, Ph.D. as she works to break the silence about cancer and its environmental links. Learn More »

Join the PAN Community

Join the PAN Community

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Pesticides & Profit

Pesticides & Profit

In the U.S., a handful of giant companies control how food is produced and gets from farmers to eaters. PAN is dedicated to challenging this chemical cartel.  Learn more »

The Truth about DDT

The Truth about DDT

DDT is in the news yet again, now promoted as the only cure for the bedbug scourge. The reality? DDT enthusiasts have a hidden agenda.  Learn More »

Pesticide Action Network's picture

Otter populations in the UK have made a remarkable comeback from the brink of extinction. According to the Guardian, their recovery is largely due to less polluted rivers resulting from UK bans on organochlorine pesticides (OCs) in the 1970s. Not only is the water safer for the otters, who are high up in the aquatic food chain, but also for their prey: fish populations have likewise recovered.

Pesticide Action Network's picture

Last week, countries gathered in Japan hammered out a global agreement to hold corporations liable for genetically modified (GM) organism pollution of ecosystems.

According to the The Mainichi Daily News, a "biosafety protocol" was adopted to set "redress rules for damage caused to ecosystems by the movements of genetically modified crops."The move came at the end of the fifth meeting on the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, kicking off international talks on the Convention on Biological Diversity. The new rules, which bolster mechanisms to hold agricultural biotech corporations like Monsanto liable, will be opened for ratification next spring.

Marcia Ishii-Eiteman's picture

I’m writing from warm, sunny New Orleans, where 900 food justice activists attending the Community Food Security Coalition conference have just wrapped up five days of workshops, conversations and field trips to the region’s innovative and indomitable farmers, fisherfolk, urban gardeners, food workers and local organizers. These brave souls are—against all odds—reinventing healthy and sustainble food systems in their communities.

Kristin Schafer's picture

Every October, The Breast Cancer Fund updates State of the Evidence. The report examines the latest on what scientists know about the links between chemicals in the environment and breast cancer. The 2010 edition is chock full of information on how pesticides and other chemicals (in food packaging, cosmetics, health care products, household cleaners and more) are contributing to our breast cancer epidemic.

Pesticide Action Network's picture

With national climate policy stalled in the Senate, hopes for policy progress rest on local, state and regional initiatives, like California's Global Warming Solutions Act (AB32). AB 32 is important because the state is looked to as a leading indicator of how progressive policy battles will play out, and because California's renewable energy economy is among the biggest.Adopted in 2006, AB 32 requires the state to come up with a plan for reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020. That plan is due to come into effect in 2011 and the oil and gas industry is on trying to stop it with Proposition 23, spending millions of dollars to a campaign to indefinitely delay climate policy passed by California voters.