New studies are raising concerns about glyphosate — the widely used herbicide in Roundup, used on farms and in home gardens — and its potential links to cancer at levels once considered safe.
As suburbs encroach on farmland, residents' risk of exposure to farm chemicals rises. Carly Hyland Living near farmland can significantly increase people’s exposure to glyphosate, the active ...
Quebec province does not allow the industrial weed killer glyphosate to be sprayed on its forests, but there is no evidence ...
A grim future awaits American agriculture if glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, is no longer available to growers, a new report commissioned by Bayer concludes. The Aimpoint Research report ...
Ahighly anticipated health report from the Trump administration steered clear of new crackdowns on food and agriculture.
Eating fruits and vegetables grown in the U.S. exposes consumers to classes of pesticides associated with serious health ...
The regenerative agriculture movement is booming, with a 22 percent year-over-year increase in shoppers buying certified products. But without federal regulation, competing certification bodies ...
Amid calls from some First Nations and municipalities in northeastern Ontario to stop glyphosate spraying on Crown land, ...
After raising the specter of pesticide harms in its first report, the new MAHA Commission report on children’s health does ...
The provision in the government funding bill could shield pesticide companies from billions of dollars in lawsuits.
There’s still so much to learn about the common herbicide, best known as Roundup. Reviewed by Dietitian Maria Laura Haddad-Garcia "Key Takeaways" Glyphosate is a common herbicide used to kill weeds.
RoundUp, Monsanto’s brand name for one of the most popular weedkillers in the world, isn’t supposed to be applied to humans. Yet because of its ubiquity in landscaping and agriculture, glyphosate, the ...
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