Toxic Trade: India2023-03-17T09:35:39+00:00

Toxic Trade: India

The UK and India Governments are in the midst of negotiating a Free Trade Agreement which they are hoping to finalise in 2023.

Trade deals encourage regulatory alignment on a wide range of issues, including pesticides. While far from perfect, UK pesticide standards are considerably stronger than India’s in terms of protecting human health and the environment. As a result, a UK-India trade deal presents a risk to the health of UK citizens and the environment. This is particularly true in the case of India which, as one the world’s largest agricultural producers and exporters, has an economic interest in weakening UK pesticide standards in order to ease access to the UK market for their food exports.

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What are the risks for UK consumer health?

A UK-India trade deal threatens to increase the amount of pesticides in food sold on UK shelves. India tends to allow larger amounts of Highly Hazardous Pesticides (HHPs) to appear in food than the UK. As just two of many examples, Indian apples and grapes are both permitted to contain 200 times the amount of the insecticide malathion than their UK equivalents. Malathion is a carcinogen and cholinesterase inhibitor. It is also a suspected endocrine disrupter which means it interferes with hormone systems and can cause birth defects, developmental disorders and reproductive problems such as infertility.

Exacerbating this risk to UK consumers is India’s ongoing issue with its agricultural exports containing illegally high levels of pesticide residues. As a result, Indian exporters face problems with shipments of food being rejected by importing countries. In 2021, as much as 200 tonnes of Indian basmati rice was rejected every month due to pesticide residues that exceeded the national limits of a wide list of countries including Egypt, Lebanon and Yemen.

Meanwhile, the ability of the UK’s border testing regime to keep Indian food containing illegally high levels of pesticides off UK shelves is highly questionable. The UK pesticide residue testing regime does not appear to have experienced a major rise in investment nor staff capacity since EU exit, despite the significant additional border control challenges it has brought.

What are the risks for UK farming?

Indian agribusiness is able to operate more cheaply using pesticides that are banned in the UK to protect human health or the environment. This gives them a competitive advantage over UK producers, which is especially concerning for crops that can be grown domestically such as wheat, onions, apples and sugar.

In some cases, the UK even allows residues of banned pesticides to appear in food imports. For example, a UK apple producer is not allowed to use carbendazim which has been banned for domestic use since 2017. However, imported apples are allowed to contain residues of carbendazim. The UK’s Trade and Agriculture Commission has warned that this double standard threatens to undercut UK farmers. In fact, the Government’s own impact assessment has projected that there will be a fall of around £10m in domestic agricultural output if a trade deal is agreed with India.

“This deal could turn significant health risks to the UK public into a competitive advantage for Indian agribusiness over our own farmers. A deal with one of the world’s largest agri-producers risks undermining the considerable efforts being made to ensure UK farming is more sustainable. We must get the details right.” Vicki Hird, Head of Sustainable Farming, Sustain

What is the potential for driving pesticide harms in India?

A UK-India trade deal also risks driving pesticide-related harms on the ground in India where the food is grown.

India is the world’s second highest user of pesticides and has one of the highest rates of unintentional pesticide poisoning. There are many instances of pesticides causing other health problems, such as the well-documented cases of children born with birth defects in the cashew growing area of Kerala. India also suffers from high rates of farmers committing suicide by swallowing pesticides. Pesticides are, in many cases, both the means and the cause of these suicides as farmers buy agrochemicals on credit but find that yields are too meagre to pay off the costs.

There have been some positive shifts within Indian agriculture in recent years, including a boom in organic farming which saw India’s organic exports grow by 50% between 2017 and 2019. A UK-India trade deal has the potential to help support organic initiatives in India while also benefitting UK consumers by increasing their access to healthy and sustainably produced food.

“Weakening pesticide standards in the UK has deadly consequences for farmers on the ground in India. Over 30,000 people die each year in pesticide-related deaths, and incentivising greater pesticide usage with relaxed laws and an expanded market will compound this problem even further.”   A.D. Dileep Kumar, CEO, PAN India

Why should UK negotiators be particularly concerned about a deal with India?

India has a long history of obstructing international efforts to regulate pesticides, particularly those that threaten trade, and has repeatedly pushed for the EU to weaken its pesticide standards.

While a trade deal with any country with weaker pesticide protections presents a considerable risk to the health of UK citizens and the environment, the UK Government should be particularly concerned about the potential for a deal with India to increase pesticide-related harms. With Indian food exports regularly containing high levels of pesticide residues, and the UK border control system seemingly under-resourced and in flux due to EU exit, it is highly likely that a rise in Indian food exports incentivised by a new trade deal will result in the increased exposure of UK consumers to harmful pesticides.

The UK Government has repeatedly promised not to sign a trade deal which compromises on existing food standards. However, whether India will agree to a trade deal that does not grant them significantly more access to the UK market for their food exports remains to be seen.

Key recommendations for the UK government

  • Do not allow any weakening of UK pesticide standards via a UK-India FTA. This must include:
    • Ensuring that no currently banned pesticides are allowed for use in the UK
    • Ensure that food containing detectable residues of currently banned substances cannot be imported into the UK
    • Ensure that Maximum Residue Levels are maintained or reduced.
  • Prevent UK farmers from being disadvantaged by cheap food imports produced to weaker pesticide standards in India. In particular, the UK must address the potential competitive threat to UK farmers by not allowing food imports grown using pesticides banned for use domestically.
  • The UK should ensure that its borders are adequately resourced to ensure that products with illegal levels of pesticide residue aren’t circulating in the UK.

For a full list of recommendations download the report here.

A few quick facts

Examples of ways in which Indian pesticide standards are weaker than UK standards:

    • Indian apples and grapes are allowed to contain 200 times the level of the insecticide malathion than UK apples. Malathion is a suspected endocrine disruptor (EDC) with links to cancer. It is also classified as a cholinesterase inhibitor and has the potential to impair the respiratory system and cause confusion, headaches and weakness.
    • Compared to its UK equivalent, wheat grown in India can contain four times the amount of carbaryl. Carbaryl is an insecticide with links to cancer. It is a suspected endocrine disruptor (EDC) and developmental or reproductive toxin.
    • Food imported from India can contain residues of the fungicide propiconazole, which is not permitted to appear in food grown in the UK. Propiconazole is classified as a possible human carcinogen, developmental or reproductive toxin and suspected endocrine disruptor (EDC).
    • India approves 91 Highly Hazardous Pesticides (HHPs), 25% more than the UK which approves 73. The list of pesticides banned in the UK but still permitted for use in India includes bee-toxic neonicotinoids and the herbicides isoproturon and atrazine which are both persistent in water and can be harmful to aquatic ecosystems.
    • In contrast to the UK, India has no mechanism for post-approval review of pesticides meaning that some pesticides authorised in the 1970s are still in use, regardless of new information relating to negative health or environmental impacts.
    • The use of counterfeit or illegal pesticides is a major issue in India, accounting for approximately 30% of all pesticides. Their use can often pose an even greater risk to human and environmental health than the use of legal pesticides.

“The Indian government has a long record of lobbying to relax levels of permitted pesticide residues, and UK negotiators will inevitably face pressure to weaken domestic regulation. Indian produce regularly contains illegally high levels of pesticides, and with an already under-resourced UK border force following Britain’s exit from the EU, an FTA that weakens the rules could pose a significant risk to public health.”
Dr Emily Lydgate, Reader in Environmental Law, University of Sussex

Find out more about specific trade deals:

Background

The UK is in the process of negotiating trade deals in the wake of its exit from the EU. While far from perfect, UK pesticide standards are some of the strongest in the world in terms of protecting human health and the environment. UK safety limits for the levels of pesticides allowed to appear in food tend to be more stringent than in the majority of other countries outside the EU.  A pesticide is also more likely to be banned in the UK due to concerns over the harms it causes than in many of the non-EU countries slated for post-Brexit trade deals.

As a result of these relatively high standards, future trade deals with non-EU countries with weaker pesticide protections present a considerable risk to the health of UK citizens and the environment. Trade partners attempting to secure access to the UK market for their food exports have much to gain and so the UK Government is likely to come under pressure to weaken our domestic pesticide standards when negotiating bilateral trade agreements with countries such as the US and Australia, or joining multilateral trade deals like the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).

Trade poses a threat to current UK pesticide standards in three key areas:

Risk 1: Amount of pesticides in food imported into UK could increase

Governments set Maximum Residue Levels (MRLs) which place limits on how much of a specific pesticide is allowed to appear in a particular food item.  The UK’s current approach is more precautionary and so its MRLs tend to be lower (e.g. more stringent) than other non-EU countries.

Risk 2: Type of pesticides in food imported into UK could become more toxic

Under the current UK system, imported produce should not contain detectable residues of any pesticide that is not approved for use in the UK. If the UK agrees to weaken its pesticide standards, then UK consumers could soon find currently prohibited pesticides in their food.

Risk 3: More toxic pesticides could be approved for use in UK

The UK’s relatively precautionary approach to which pesticides it approves for use can come under attack from trade partners seeking to export food currently excluded from the UK market. This could lead to the reversal of existing UK bans on pesticides known to harm human health (such as paraquat) or the environment (like neonicotinoids).

Trade deals also pose an economic threat to the future of UK agriculture. If UK food starts to contain higher levels of more toxic pesticides then British farmers will struggle to meet EU standards, thereby losing their primary export destination which currently accounts for 60% of UK agricultural exports. Equally concerning, British farmers could be undercut by a flood of imported crops grown more cheaply on a larger scale and to lower standards. It’s crucial that the UK Government protects British farming by defending pesticide standards, particularly in trade negotiations with agricultural powerhouses such as Australia and Canada.

Frequently Asked Questions

What have trade deals got to do with pesticides?2021-06-07T11:03:53+01:00

A trade deal is an agreement between countries designed to remove restrictions on goods and services traded between them.

The key area where trade and pesticides intersect is around the global trade in food which totals roughly $2 trillion per year. Countries set different safety limits for how much of a particular pesticide is allowed to appear in an item of food (this safety limit is known as a Maximum Residue Level).

Along with EU countries, the UK has tended to take a relatively precautionary approach to protecting human health from pesticides and so has set more stringent safety limits than other countries such as the US and Australia. As a result, much of the food produced in these countries contains pesticide residues which are too high to meet UK standards. This prevents companies from these countries exporting their produce to the UK. Trade partners therefore have much to gain by pressuring the UK to allow food imports containing higher levels of more toxic pesticides.

In recent years, trade deals have increasingly been used to push for ‘regulatory cooperation’, whereby joint standards are agreed between trading partners. Under this guise, the agrochemical industry and countries such as the US have made concerted attacks on the European approach to regulating pesticides and lobbied strongly for it to be weakened. The UK is already under considerable pressure to take a laxer approach to which pesticides it authorises for use. If the UK Government bows to these demands, then pesticides banned in the UK due to evidence that they impact negatively on human health or the environment could soon be used again in our farms and gardens.

How might trade deals impact my health?2021-06-07T11:05:55+01:00

While far from perfect, UK pesticide standards are some of the strongest in the world in terms of protecting human health. However, these relatively high standards prevent other countries from exporting food to the UK and governments therefore push to weaken UK protections.

If UK trade negotiators give way to their demands then the increased risk to human health could be significant. American grapes, for example, are allowed to contain 1,000 times the amount of the insecticide propargite than their UK equivalents. Propargite has been linked to cancer and classified as a ‘developmental or reproductive toxin’, meaning that it can negatively affect sexual function and fertility and can cause miscarriages. An Australian apple can contain 100 times the amount of fenitrothion – an insecticide classified as a suspected endocrine disrupter and cholinesterase inhibitor – than a UK apple.

As well as finding themselves exposed to higher levels of pesticides in their diets, UK citizens could soon have no choice but to consume food containing pesticides that are currently banned from appearing in UK food. The US allows the use of almost 1.5 times the number of highly hazardous pesticides as the UK, while Australia permits almost double. As just one of many examples, unlike the UK, the US and India continue to allow food to contain residues of the insecticide chlorpyrifos which has been shown to negatively affect the cognitive development of foetuses and young children.

Won’t UK borders stop food imports containing dangerous levels of pesticides from entering the UK?2022-08-03T23:27:21+01:00

There are significant questions about the UK border testing regime for pesticides and whether it is extensive enough to detect shipments of food containing pesticide residues above the UK’s legal limits. Specifically:

  • The UK tests a small fraction of produce that is imported or on sale to the public, only around three thousand 1kg samples of food per year. While this testing is useful to an extent, it only provides a snapshot in time because it is inconsistent and piecemeal. For example, mangoes might be tested one year and not the next and only a tiny proportion of mangoes consumed in the UK are tested. Similarly, the limited amount of samples tested does not reflect the huge range of produce available to the UK public.
  • The Government argues that it’s unnecessary to test more than 3,000 samples of food per year because the UK runs a risk-based system which focusses on the food most likely to pose a threat to consumer health. However, in 2021, the Government failed to test three-quarters of the previous year’s produce of concern.
  • There currently appears to be almost no scrutiny of the UK’s pesticide residue testing regime or its results. For example, PAN UK found some major errors in the 2021 published data which were not picked up by the Government nor any other public body.
  • Despite the significant border control challenges posed by EU exit, the UK pesticide residue testing regime does not appear to have experienced a significant rise in investment or staff capacity. As a result, outside of the EU, it is highly likely that the UK lacks the infrastructure and resources required to adequately test imported produce for pesticide residues.

It is therefore fairly likely that food containing illegal levels of pesticides will be able to slip through the net and make it on to UK shelves.

How might trade deals impact the environment?2022-08-03T23:13:55+01:00

Any weakening of UK pesticide standards via trade deals poses risks not just to human health but also to the environment. Trade partners such as the US and India have a history of challenging the EU’s relatively precautionary approach to which pesticides are allowed for use, and the UK is already coming under similar pressure. Almost all non-EU countries (including Australia, the US and India) allow the use of pesticides which the UK prohibits because they are highly toxic to bees and pollinators, including neonicotinoids which are notorious for driving massive declines in bee populations. Most countries also authorise pesticides known to contaminate groundwater and harm aquatic ecosystems, such as the herbicides atrazine and diuron which are banned for use in the UK.

If the UK Government is to achieve its ambition to “leave the natural environment in a better state than we found it” then it must resist efforts by trade partners to push the UK to authorise, or reverse bans on, pesticides which harm wildlife and contaminate water and soil. It must also avoid exporting its environmental footprint by accepting imports of food or animal feed grown elsewhere using environmentally-damaging pesticides, as well as products that have driven other serious environmental problems such as deforestation.

How might trade deals impact UK farmers?2022-08-03T23:15:12+01:00

A drop in UK pesticide standards as a result of a trade deal would also pose a significant economic threat to the future of UK agriculture. If UK food starts to contain higher levels of more toxic pesticides then British farmers will struggle to meet EU standards, thereby losing their primary export destination which currently accounts for 60% of UK agricultural exports. Equally concerning, British farmers could be undercut by a flood of imported crops grown more cheaply using pesticides that are banned for use in the UK due to the harms they cause.

In some cases, the UK allows residues of banned pesticides to appear in food imports. For example, a UK apple producer is not allowed to use the fungicide carbendazim which has been banned for domestic use since 2017. However, imported apples are allowed to contain residues of carbendazim. The UK Government’s own Trade and Agriculture Commission has highlighted this double standard as one of the key issues with both the Australia and New Zealand deals. It’s crucial that the Government protects British farming by defending pesticide standards, particularly in trade negotiations with agricultural powerhouses such as the US and India.

Could boycotting food imports from a particular country solve the problems?2022-08-03T23:28:23+01:00

No! Refusing to buy food from a particular country will not stop a trade deal from being signed. Boycotts can also risk having unintended, negative knock-on effects on farmers, especially in poorer countries. It is also often impossible to discern where food has come from, especially if it is contained within a mixed product such as a ready-meal or salad, or if it is served in places such as restaurants and canteens where the origin country is usually not given.

Instead of boycotting particular imports, we need to pressure governments to sign trade deals that support healthy and sustainable forms of agriculture and don’t drive an increase in pesticide use or harms. Locking in high pesticide standards can drive positive changes in importing countries by protecting consumer health. In exporting countries, strong pesticide standards prevent farmers and the natural environment from being exposed to the most hazardous chemicals.

Do high UK pesticide standards disadvantage famers in poorer countries by restricting trade?2022-08-03T23:31:11+01:00

No, in fact it’s the opposite! Adopting strong Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) and restricting the import of produce that contains residues of banned pesticides is not only good for UK consumers who benefit from having less pesticides in their food but also has the potential to drive positive action in the exporting country. For example, by adopting stringent MRLs, the EU market has driven the Vietnamese Government to support farmers to reduce their pesticide use in order to meet EU standards. While this support is aimed at facilitating trade, it is likely to have the knock-on effect of benefitting the health of both people and the environment within Vietnam itself. This sits in stark contrast to claims made by the UK Government that high UK food standards negatively impact developing countries.

When you consider that roughly 44% of the global population working on farms — 860 million farmers and agricultural workers – are poisoned by pesticides every year it is crucial that the UK uses trade agreements to drive up global pesticide standards rather than create a race to the bottom. For the benefit of farmers and wildlife in poorer countries, as well its own domestic consumers, the UK must maintain (or even strengthen) its MRL requirements and resist all pressure to weaken pesticide standards through trade agreements.

Do trade deals with non-EU countries pose a risk to UK pesticide standards?2022-08-03T23:19:03+01:00

In theory, yes. The UK’s current pesticide standards offer better protection for human health and the environment than those of any non-EU country. Trade negotiations with all non-EU countries therefore pose a threat to UK pesticide standards as countries push to gain access to the UK market for their agricultural exports. The more agricultural produce a country exports the more it has to gain by driving down UK pesticide standards. It’s therefore vital that UK negotiators are most vigilant in defending our pesticide standards in trade negotiations with agricultural powerhouses such as Canada and Australia. If a country does not export much food (such as Japan for example) then it is unlikely to push for UK pesticide standards to be weakened.

In addition to allowing larger amounts of more toxic chemicals to appear in UK food, there are also a range of important differences between the way the UK has chosen to govern pesticides and that of future trade partners. Arguably the most fundamental is that the UK currently takes an approach based on the view that some pesticides are intrinsically hazardous and therefore simply too dangerous to be in use. In contrast, non-EU countries follow an approach based on the belief that almost every risk can be mitigated.

The divergence in the approaches of different trade partners also relate to numerous procedural aspects of the pesticide regime. For example, Australia and India have no set time period for reviewing pesticide approvals, meaning that harmful pesticides can remain in use indefinitely once authorised. In contrast, under the current UK system, pesticides are granted a maximum license of 15 years before having to go through a risk assessment process to be reapproved.

It is crucial that UK trade negotiators understand these differences so they are able to defend aspects of the UK pesticide regime designed to protect human health and environment.

What is the Precautionary Principle and why is it pitted against the ‘science-based’ approach?2021-06-07T11:42:46+01:00

The Precautionary Principle, which emerged in the 1970s, theoretically underpins all current UK decision-making on pesticides. It allows regulators to adopt precautionary measures when scientific evidence about an environmental or human health hazard is uncertain and the stakes are high. For example, when evidence began to emerge that neonicotinoids were driving alarming declines in bee populations the UK Government was able to support a ban on their use on the basis that here was sufficient cause for concern. They did not have to wait for the evidence to be definitive, an often unattainable goal.

In contrast, many of the UK’s potential trade partners follow what is misleadingly termed ‘the science-based approach’.  Under this approach, instead of a pesticide manufacturer having to demonstrate that their product is safe, regulators must offer a very high level of scientific proof that a product is dangerous. However, evidence of harms may not emerge for many years and, in the meantime, some of the negative impacts caused – such as the development of malignant tumours or the extinction of particular species – may be irreversible.

Potential trade partners and the agrochemical industry use the term ‘science-based’ as a veiled and publicly palatable way through which to attack the Precautionary Principle. It’s vital that UK negotiators understand the true meaning of ‘science-based ‘and are prepared to defend the vital role that the Precautionary Principle plays in protecting human health and environment from pesticides.

What’s the difference for UK pesticide standards between negotiating a bilateral deal with a specific country and joining a multilateral trade deal?2022-08-03T23:30:59+01:00

Bilateral trade deals are negotiated between two countries. Both sides set out what they hope to achieve through the deal and negotiate with each other accordingly until an agreement is reached. In contrast, multilateral trade deals have three or more member countries and the core agreement is negotiated between the original signatories. Countries which join multilateral trade deals later, once the deal is already in existence, are expected to comply with the core agreement.

While the UK can therefore make demands to protect domestic pesticide standards in bilateral trade negotiations with individual countries, it is unlikely to be able to do so when joining a multilateral deal like the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). In this case (and when joining other multilateral deals) the UK would be acceding to the deal, not negotiating.

Some multilateral deals do have ways for countries to opt out of specific rules included in their core agreement. However, exemptions usually have to be negotiated with all other members and it would be unlikely for the UK to secure unanimous agreement for a broad exemption from all requirements related to pesticides, particularly if a trade deal’s member countries include large agricultural producers.

The UK Government exited the EU arguing that it no longer wanted to be a ‘rule-taker’, and continues to present trade sovereignty as one of the key benefits of Brexit. However, joining multilateral deals like CPTPP with almost no opportunity to change the text of the core agreement would undeniably reduce the level of control that the UK has over its trade policy.

Could trade deals be used to strengthen pesticide standards?2020-06-08T23:44:19+01:00

No! Trade deals are designed to remove restrictions on the trade in goods and therefore aren’t the place to secure better standards.

A closer look at the EU’s existing trade deals reveals the limited prospects for the UK to ‘export’ a more stringent approach to pesticide regulation. These deals don’t actively promote the EU’s precautionary approach to pesticides, in fact it largely goes unmentioned. Through its trade deals the EU has actually subjected itself to some new pressures to deregulate pesticides by creating structures which allow other countries to push for weaker pesticide protections. This is something that UK negotiators should avoid.

Why is the UK particularly vulnerable to pressure from trade partners?2022-08-03T23:23:39+01:00

The UK is particularly vulnerable to weakening its pesticide regulation through trade deals. This is due to a combination of political pressure to conclude trade deals in order to recoup lost EU market access and ‘make a success’ of Brexit, pressure from some UK lobby groups, and the fact that EU exit has led to a ‘governance gap’ in terms of UK institutions, systems and staff.

In addition, the UK regulatory system is already in flux and subject to fewer checks and balances than the EU provided. So, rather than having a settled domestic regulatory framework as its starting point, the UK Government has rushed to bring EU rules into the UK lawbooks. In doing so, it has replaced a system of EU checks and balances with discretionary powers for UK Ministers to amend, revoke and make regulations. This makes it much easier for the UK to change its pesticide regulations to accommodate trade partners.

This is particularly concerning as the UK Parliament already has a weak influence on UK trade negotiations as compared to, for example, the EU or US. The rules governing trade in the UK offer an extremely limited role for parliamentarians and almost no opportunities for public scrutiny. Currently, no one outside the UK Government can even access the text of a trade deal until it is being ratified, let alone amend it.

The current lack of transparency makes it much more likely that countries with lower pesticide standards will be able to force down UK pesticide protections. In addition, there is a question around whether the UK Government, which relied on the European Commission to negotiate its trade deal for 50 years starting in the 1970s, has the capacity or expertise to withstand attempts to lower pesticide standards, especially given the political pressure to conclude agreements quickly.

With the perfect storm of inexperienced UK trade negotiators, staff shortages, more powerful and well-resourced negotiating partners and a shroud of secrecy enclosing the entire process, trade deals are arguably the most likely route through which the UK’s pesticide standards will be undermined.

What should the UK Government do?2021-06-07T11:47:00+01:00

Each of our Toxic Trade reports and briefings contains a full list of recommendations, many of which are specific to the Free Trade Agreement in question. The following recommendations for the UK Government apply to all trade agreements across the board:

  • Do not allow any weakening of UK pesticide standards via post-Brexit trade agreements. This must include:
    • Ensuring that no currently banned pesticides are allowed for use in the UK
    • Ensure that food containing detectable residues of currently banned substances cannot be imported into the UK
    • Ensure that Maximum Residue Levels are maintained or strengthened.
  • Ensure a level-playing field for UK farmers by maintaining existing UK pesticide standards, thereby enabling them to continue exporting to the EU.
  • Prevent UK farmers from being disadvantaged by cheap food imports produced to weaker pesticide standards in non-EU countries.
  • Maintain the Precautionary Principle as the basis upon which all pesticide-related decisions are made and strengthen its implementation. This includes maintaining the so called ‘hazard-based’ approach to pesticide authorisations.
  • Preserve the power for the UK to exercise its right to go above and beyond the status quo and applicable international standards to continually strive for higher levels of consumer and environmental protection.
  • Introduce additional legislative protections to ensure that any change to food safety standards or environmental protections subsumed in trade agreements can only be introduced via primary legislation.
  • Ensure that trade agreements are developed in the open with the opportunity for full democratic scrutiny.
What can I do?2022-08-03T23:25:06+01:00

There has been much public uproar about the UK lowering its food standards via a trade deal to accept ‘chlorinated-chicken’. However, the risks related to pesticides are equally significant but the issue isn’t getting enough public attention so the Government doesn’t feel under as much pressure to protect standards.

Trade talks are ongoing so it’s crucial that we start making noise about this issue now.

Take 1 minute to email your MP to ask them to make sure the UK Government defends your health and environment against Toxic Trade.

Please forward the action on to friends and family and consider sharing it on social media using the hashtag #ToxicTrade

A report by the Pesticide Action Network UK, Sustain, and Dr Emily Lydgate

Dr Emily Lydgate, University of Sussex

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