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WASHINGTON - The Biden administration said Wednesday it was banning the use of chlorpyrifos, a widely used pesticide long targeted by environmentalists, on food crops because it poses risks to children and farmworkers.
The Environmental Protection Agency acted after a federal appeals court ordered the government in April to determine quickly whether the pesticide is safe or should be prohibited.
During the Obama administration, the EPA had initiated a ban, but the agency reversed that decision shortly after President Donald Trump took office in 2017. President Joe Biden has pledged a review of more than 100 of his predecessor's environmental regulatory actions.
"Today EPA is taking an overdue step to protect public health," Administrator Michael Regan said. "After the delays and denials of the prior administration, EPA will follow the science and put health and safety first."
Chlorpyrifos is applied on numerous crops, including soybeans, fruit and nut trees, broccoli and cauliflower. Studies have linked it to potential brain damage in children and fetuses that could lead to reduced IQ, memory loss and attention deficit disorders.
FILE - An aerial image shows spray application in a green agricultural field on the eastern shore of Maryland. (Photo by: Edwin Remsburg/VW Pics via Getty Images)
The Pesticide Action Network North America and the Natural Resources Defense Council petitioned the EPA in 2007 to revoke all approved levels of chlorpyrifos in food.
EPA said Wednesday it would do so, based on its findings that chlorpyrifos did not meet a legally required standard of reasonable certainty that exposure to the pesticide wouldn’t be harmful.
"It is gratifying to see the EPA once again adhere to the best available science when making critical regulatory decisions," said Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, chairwoman of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology.
The European Union, Canada and some states including California, Hawaii, New York, Maryland, and Oregon have restricted application of chlorpyrifos on foods. Those limits -- and development of replacement pest controls -- have led to a decline in farmers’ use of chlorpyrifos, EPA said.
"The ban will safeguard farmworkers, their families, communities and the food supply," said Allison Johnson, an attorney with the NRDC. "EPA is finally following its own findings on this poisonous pesticide."
Teresa Romero, president of United Farm Workers, said the group was "relieved that farmworkers and their families will no longer have to worry about the myriad of ways this pesticide could impact their lives."
Corteva Inc. had been the world’s largest manufacturer of the pesticide but stopped producing it last year. The company, created after a merger of Dow Chemical and Dupont, said previously that declining sales drove its decision and that it considered chlorpyrifos safe.
EPA's decision "effectively removes an important tool for farmers," the company said in a statement, adding that "it appears that the rationale used by the agency is inconsistent with the complete and robust database of more than 4,000 studies and reports that have examined the product in terms of health, safety and the environment."
EPA said after taking public comments, it would continue reviewing whether to allow use of chlorpyrifos for purposes not directly tied to food production, such as cattle ear tags and mosquito control.
Bills seeking to prohibit use of chlorpyrifos and similar pesticides have been proposed in Congress.
Introduced by Dow Chemical in 1965, chlorpyrifos was banned for household use in 2001.
Lawsuits were filed last month in California seeking damages against Dow Chemical and Corteva, as well as companies that applied the chemical. They allege contamination of personal belongings inside farming community homes. Suits were filed last year on behalf of farm laborers in the nation's largest agricultural state.
Stuart Calwell, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, said he was pleased with EPA's decision but that health risks remain in areas "blanketed with chlorpyrifos for decades."
"Today’s action won’t clean up that mess, and the danger won’t go away until someone does," he said.