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News and comment on genetically modified foods and their associated pesticides    
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A product whose time has come: Glyphosate-free Roundup on sale in Austria

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Published: 03 May 2017
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Vinegar bottle and Roundup container

The active ingredient of Scotts’ herbicidal product is vinegar

A new type of Roundup is on sale in Austrian garden centres. It’s the same old bottle with the same familiar brand name and is marketed by Scotts, under licence from Monsanto. The only difference compared with the old-style Roundup is that the new one has a prominent label on the front saying it’s formulated “without glyphosate” (“ohne Glyphosat” in German).

Roundup 3L container label details - GermanOn the back, on the ingredients label, the “active substance” is defined as none other than vinegar (“Essigsäure”).

The new product was bought by Dr Helmut Burtscher, a biochemist who works for the Vienna-based NGO GLOBAL 2000, in a garden centre in Vienna. He learned of the glyphosate-free Roundup in a brochure sent to his house advertising new products. His reaction? “I laughed – but then I went quickly to the store to see if it was really true or a joke. It was real.”

Why does Burtscher think that Scotts brought out this product? He says, “The World Health Organisation's cancer agency IARC has stated that glyphosate is a probable human carcinogen. Monsanto has admitted in court that it cannot claim that Roundup doesn’t cause cancer because the complete formulation has never been tested.

“Garden centres are wondering what they can tell their customers. They have undoubtedly lost business. Some have phased out all chemical pesticides, such as Bellaflora, which took this step in cooperation with GLOBAL 2000 long before IARC came out with its verdict.”

Burtscher says that in the case of Bellaflora, the NGO didn’t need to apply much pressure: “The expertise came from the company. Now they only sell organic-approved plant protection products.”

Dr Helmut BurtscherBut why does Burtscher think Scotts are calling its new vinegar-based herbicide Roundup? “Maybe Scotts thought: We need this trade name because people see Roundup as more effective than vinegar!”

Burtscher spent about 30 euros on the glyphosate-free Roundup but says in future he will just buy vinegar if it works out cheaper. It may also be safer, he adds, since “We do not know if the vinegar-based Roundup formulation still contains toxic adjuvants” (additives present in glyphosate herbicide formulations that are designed to increase the toxicity of glyphosate to plants).

But if Scotts can prove the safety of the adjuvants, Burtscher says it’s a win-win situation: “It’s a victory for Monsanto because now it has a product that doesn’t cause harm and a victory for people and the environment.”

One thing is certain: glyphosate-free Roundup is a product whose time has come.

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