Updated: 22/11/2024
In March 2015 the World Health Organisation’s International Agency for Research against Cancer (IARC) found the world’s most commonly used herbicide, glyphosate, “probably carcinogenic to humans”.
Three months later the EU’s official risk assessment of the pesticide, conducted by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and Germany’s Federal Risk Assessment Institute (BfR), came to the opposite conclusion that glyphosate was “unlikely” to cause cancer to humans.
A war of words started with, notably, EFSA’s director calling scientists critical of its work (including some involved in IARC’s review) “facebook scientists” for a petition they had sent to the European Commission.
And it continues with, lately, directors of the two organisations engaging in a public exchange of letters, copied to more or less everyone politically involved on this file, where both defended the integrity of their respective institution’s work.
Eventually, a meeting between the two, meant to take place this week, was cancelled, as EFSA did not agree to the IARC’s director’s requests to change a number of its statements about IARC’s work on its website.
Under the giant shadow of Monsanto
One reason behind this almighty mess is the extreme public sensitivity of the topic: behind glyphosate lurks the shadow of US multinational Monsanto, currently one of the most hated companies on the planet, which built its economic development around this wide-spectrum herbicide and GM crops engineered to tolerate it. Monsanto coordinated industry producers into a Glyphosate Task Force (GTF) to facilitate the pesticide’s review approval.
But the story has more to it than a political tussle. While conflicts are common in science too, resolving them relies on scientists reviewing and debating the evidence. The problem is this step cannot be taken because parts of this evidence are missing.
Three industry-sponsored carcinogenicity studies on mice, in particular, are not accessible to IARC while EFSA insists they played an important role in informing its decision. This situation is unfortunately typical of debates on pesticides regulation. This is why for years Corporate Europe Observatory and others have been asking EFSA and the European Commission that, just as with clinical trials for medicines, the data supporting EFSA’s scientific opinions should systematically be made public to enable free scientific scrutiny.
To find out more about the basis of the glyphosate decision we filed an access to documents request to EFSA in December 2015 to demand the disclosure of these three mouse studies. EFSA refused, and justified this on the basis that the owners of the studies, all industry producers of glyphosate, said disclosing this evidence would undermine trade secrets and intellectual property rights. Corporate Europe Observatory is appealing that decision by EFSA.
Meanwhile, the political process goes on, with the European Commission expected (according to EU sources) to propose member states start discussing a new EU-wide renewal of glyphosate’s market authorisation next 7th or 8th March.
Adding to the tension, France’s food safety agency ANSES published on 12 February an opinion contradicting EFSA’s (even though ANSES officials had contributed to it) by saying that glyphosate could perhaps, after all, be classified as a substance suspected of being carcinogenic to humans – a category which would not imply an EU ban – and that more research should be done, in particular by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) in Helsinki.
The ‘mysterious three’
The starkest difference between the EU’s regulatory agencies and the independent scientists who wrote IARC’s assessment perhaps lies in their respective interpretation of the animal evidence.
The conflict is particularly intense over the EU’s use of five industry-sponsored carcinogenicity studies in mice reviewed by BfR and EFSA. Two of these studies, from 1983 (‘A chronic feeding study of glyphosate (Roundup technical) in mice 77-2061! (BDN-77-420)’) and 1993 (‘Glyphosate: 104-week dietary carcinogenicity study in mice, IRI 438618’), were already included in industry’s first EU level request for a market authorisation for glyphosate.
But industry sent three new unpublished studies for the EU market authorisation renewal – the ‘mysterious three’, as scientific literature reviews specialist Paul Whaley dubbed them):
- ‘Carcinogenicity Study with Glyphosate Technical in Swiss Albino Mice’ (2001), following OECD Guideline 451 & GLP – study owned by the Israeli pesticides company ADAMA Agan Ltd and was never published;
- ‘Glyphosate technical: Dietary Carcinogenicity Study in the Mouse’ (2009), following OECD Guideline 451 & GLP – study owned by the Australian pesticides company Nufarm and was never published;
- ‘HR-001: 18-Month Oral Oncogenicity Study in Mice’ (1997), following following OECD Guideline 451 & GLP – study owned by the Japanese pesticides company Arysta LifeSciences Corporation and was never published.
One study, two very different interpretations
The names of the authors of all five studies are redacted in EFSA’s publications. In a Twitter exchange on the matter, Monsanto Europe explained this was for security reasons: “If you get scientists’ names what’s stopping people going after them/families?”
The company later added to its first reply saying: “It’s a sad fact that some activists target Monsanto employees for harassment.” But this seems simply irrelevant in this case given that not a single Monsanto employee seems to have been involved in the conduct of these studies.
Despite the first two studies, from 1983 and 1993, also not having been published, IARC could access them. Indeed it interpreted the 1983 study as showing “a significant increase in the incidence of rare tumours, with a dose-related trend, which could be attributed to glyphosate.”
That makes a stark contrast with EFSA and BfR’s review of the same study. IARC’s interpretation of the 1993 study is on the other hand consistent with EFSA and BfR’s. But it could not evaluate the three more recent studies, even though it was able to access summaries which its scientists commented showed incidence of various tumours.
‘Key’ and ‘pivotal’ evidence
The Mysterious Three are an essential element of the conflict. This is particularly so because EFSA heavily referred to them to explain its assessment, with José Tarazona, the Head of EFSA’s Pesticides Unit in charge of the assessment, calling them “key” and “pivotal”.
Similar comments can be found from various member states’ experts, with Belgium insisting that “it was unfortunate that IARC did not take into account 3 guideline studies in both mice and rats, since this could have put the overall conclusions in another perspective.” This very unfair sentiment – IARC could not access these studies – was echoed by Ireland: “IARC’s failure to evaluate the 3 other studies is not helpful.”
Since EFSA’s publication, the agency has been arguing that there is enough detailed information in its documentation to perform a good analysis, but IARC scientists respond that the descriptions and summaries published miss key elements and cannot replace original data.
Among these missing elements, IARC said, are “the historical control data from the reporting laboratory for all tumours with statistically significant positive increases, by either test recommended by OECD; another is the survival of the animals.” More generally, IARC pointed to its list of attention points for all studies it assesses.
Secret perfection or convenient argument?
So what is in these Mysterious Three? How can only three studies explain such a striking contrast? Would they be so strong as to convince IARC to reverse its stance? Would they on the contrary confirm it?
Or, given the strong political interest in this file and the fact that the EU’s Pesticides Regulation would force glyphosate out of the market were its cancer-causing properties confirmed, isn’t referring to these secret studies a convenient argument for all those willing to keep glyphosate on the EU market anyway?
In its response to Corporate Europe Observatory on 5th February 2015 explaining why it would not release the information, EFSA said that the studies’ owners (who, by law, must be consulted) refused any disclosure because they considered their studies to contain trade secrets and intellectual property which if released would harm their industrial and commercial interests as well as their “competitive position”.
EFSA agreed with this analysis and explained that, according to the exception foreseen in the EU’s Public Access to Documents Regulation 1049/2001 as well as in the EU’s Pesticides Regulation 1107/2009, it was entitled to not disclose the documents.
Abusive use of the trade secrets protection argument
However, both regulations only protect commercial interests and, in the case of the Pesticides Regulation, a limited list of elements within the studies, not the whole document – it is difficult to believe that everything in a scientific study would be a trade secret.
Moreover, the EU’s Pesticides Regulation stipulates that any data owner refusing disclosure of its material must provide a verifiable proof that disclosure would harm him, which was apparently not done.
Finally, glyphosate has been off-patent for 15 years and most pesticide companies now producing glyphosate belong to the Monsanto-led Glyphosate Task Force, the group that bundled all these studies together and sent them to the BfR and EFSA. How would disclosing these studies harm any of these companies’ competitive position if they were already shared among the main competitors?
As a consequence, CEO is appealing this decision, hoping that EFSA will use the opportunity of this major file and controversy to demonstrate its good faith in actually acting upon its declared intentions on data transparency and providing a level of openness that enables this conflict to evolve into a more productive, evidence-based discussion.
David vs. Goliath legal action in play since 2011
The data used by the European Commission to grant a market authorisation to glyphosate has been a much-debated issue for a long time.
In October 2011 Greenpeace Netherlands and Pesticides Action Network Europe took action against the European Commission and at the European Court of Justice to compel it to disclose the glyphosate industry’s secret dossier. In October 2013 the Court’s General Court ordered the European Commission to disclose large sections of the documents.
But the European Commission lodged an appeal which is ongoing. From March 2015 onwards, the European Commission has received support from numerous industry groups in this appeal:
- the European Crop Protection Association (‘ECPA’), which argues that “an adequate protection of confidential business information (‘CBI’) is essential in order to preserve and stimulate innovation and thus competitiveness and growth in the EU crop protection sector.”
- CropLife International, the international lobby group of the pesticides industry, whose members “account for approximately 75% of sales across the crop protection industry worldwide” and whose interest consists in “promoting the interests of its members as regards, inter alia, the protection of intellectual property and, in particular, confidential business information.”
- A delegation of US industry, composed of CropLife America, Inc., the National Association of Manufacturers of the United States of America and the American Chemistry Council, Inc., who argue that “the present appeal, since it concerns a conflict between the right of access to documents concerning the environment and the protection of confidential business information that manufacturers of chemical products are required to submit to the competent authority, raises a question of principle which is liable to affect the interests of [their] members.”
- the European Chemical Industry Council, the EU’s chemicals industry, arguing that “it has for many years underlined the importance of an adequate protection of confidential business information (‘CBI’) for the competitiveness of the EU chemicals industry.”
- the European Crop Care Association, an association representing small and medium-sized enterprises operating in the generic pesticides industry, who says that “the Court’s judgment in the present appeal will have a significant impact on the small and medium-sized enterprises which it represents, which rely heavily on industrial secrets to protect their intellectual property and innovation.”
MEPs – reject the ‘Trade Secrets Directive’!
As an important aside, CEO also calls MEPs to reject the so-called Trade Secrets Directive, whose final vote in the European Parliament is announced for next April 12.
As a matter of fact, one of the numerous problems with this text is that it would give companies additional arguments to fight public interest disclosures in court by threatening public authorities with massive financial penalties would they dare to disclose information they consider a trade secret.
This article was originally published by Corporate Europe Observatory. Please refer to the original version for full list of references etc.