GM Watch
  • Main Menu
    • Home
    • News
      • Newsletter subscription
      • News Reviews
      • News Languages
        • Notícias em Português
        • Nieuws in het Nederlands
        • Nachrichten in Deutsch
      • Archive
    • Resources
      • GM Myth Makers
      • Non-GM successes
      • GM Quotes
      • GM Myths
      • GM Firms
        • Monsanto: a history
        • Monsanto: resources
        • Bayer: a history
        • Bayer: resources
      • GM Booklet
      • GM Book
    • Contact
    • About
    • Donations
News and comment on genetically modified foods and their associated pesticides    
  • News
    • Newsletter subscription
    • News Reviews
    • News Languages
      • Notícias em Português
      • Nieuws in het Nederlands
      • Nachrichten in Deutsch
    • Archive
  • Resources
    • Non-GM Successes
    • GM Myth Makers
    • GM Quotes
    • GM Myths
    • GM Firms
      • Monsanto: a history
      • Monsanto: resources
      • Bayer: a history
      • Bayer: resources
    • GM Booklet
    • GM Book
  • Donations
  • Contact
  • About

INTRODUCTION TO GM

GMO Myths and Facts front page.jpg

GENE EDITING MYTHS, RISKS, & RESOURCES

Gene Editing Myths and Reality

CITIZENS’ GUIDE TO GM

GMO Myths and Truths front cover

PLEASE SUPPORT GMWATCH

Donations

If you like what we do, please help us do more. You can donate via Paypal or credit/debit card. Some of you have opted to give a regular donation. We greatly appreciate that as it helps place us on a more stable financial basis. Thank you for your support!

Despite efforts to stop drift, dicamba complaints up

Details
Published: 13 July 2018
Twitter

Indiana office receives record number of complaints of drift damage

Just as GMWatch predicted, measures aimed at preventing dicamba drift by issuing restrictions on when and how farmers spray are not working. In Indiana, record numbers of complaints of drift have come in this year to the relevant office.

Dicamba is sprayed on GM dicamba-tolerant crops, mostly soybeans.
---

Despite efforts to stop drift, dicamba complaints up

wfyi, 12 July 2018
https://www.wfyi.org/news/articles/despite-efforts-to-stop-drift-dicamba-complaints-up

Half way through the year, complaints about the weed killer dicamba are increasing. This could mean efforts to stop the chemical from drifting across property lines aren’t working.

The Office of the Indiana State Chemist received almost 70 complaints about dicamba so far this year. That's up from roughly 40 complaints at the same time last year — which was already exceptionally high.

State Chemist Pesticide Administrator Dave Scott says in 2017 new dicamba products came on the market along with types of dicamba-resistant soybeans. He says farmers with tolerant soybeans were spraying dicamba that would drift and harm non-resistant soybeans.

As a result, the Environmental Protection Agency placed more label restrictions on the weed killer and made training sessions for new dicamba products mandatory.

“Our hope was that these numbers would be closer to zero or single digits, but we’re ahead of last year’s pace,” says Scott.

Scott says dicamba can harm unprotected soybeans in a number of ways — anything from stunting the growth of the plant to killing it. He says it's too early to tell exactly what's caused the increase. The OISC still needs to investigate many of this year's complaints.

“I can’t tell you if the additional restrictions have failed, I can’t tell you if these incidences are applicator negligence,” he says.

More than 90 percent of the complaint investigations found some dicamba violation. Scott says before dicamba products became an issue, there were some concerned about the possibility of drift because the chemical is so volatile.

"So the application, let's say, is made yesterday and it goes down and it hits the target. If the conditions are right and things heat up the right way, dicamba has a tendency to actually volatilize — sort of turn into a gas and actually move off target," says Scott.

This fall, the EPA will decide if dicamba can be used again next year.

Indiana Environmental reporting is supported by the Environmental Resilience Institute, an Indiana University Grand Challenge project developing Indiana-specific projections and informed responses to problems of environmental change.

Menu

Home

Subscriptions

News Archive

News Reviews

GM Book

Resources

Non-GM Successes

GM Myth Makers

GM Myths

GM Quotes

GM Booklet

Contacts

Contact Us

About

Facebook

Twitter

Donations

Content 1999 - 2025 GMWatch.
Web Development By SCS Web Design