Ethics, Monsanto style
From NPR:
Two years ago, a U.N.-sponsored scientific agency declared that the popular weedkiller glyphosate probably causes cancer. That finding
from the International Agency for Research on Cancer caused an
international uproar. Monsanto, the company that invented glyphosate and
still sells most of it, unleashed a fierce campaign to discredit the
IARC's conclusions.
New details of the company's counterattack came to light this week. Internal company emails,
released as part of a lawsuit against the company, show how Monsanto
recruited outside scientists to co-author reports defending the safety
of glyphosate, sold under the brand name Roundup. Monsanto executive
William Heydens proposed that the company "ghost-write" one paper. In an
email, Heydens wrote that "we would be keeping the cost down by us
doing the writing and they would just edit & sign their names so to
speak." Heydens wrote that this is how Monsanto had "handled" an earlier
paper on glyphosate's safety....
The emails also offer hints of a friendly relationship between
Monsanto and a senior regulator at the Environmental Protection Agency,
Jess Rowland. The EPA was already doing its own assessment of
glyphosate's health risks, but after the U.N. report appeared, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention apparently was considering
launching its own study.
In late April, 2015, Rowland called a
regulatory expert at Monsanto, Daniel Jenkins, to ask who at the CDC was
working on the glyphosate study. Jenkins reported on the conversation
in an email to his colleagues. He wrote that Rowland "told me no
coordination is going on and he wanted to establish some saying 'If I
can kill this I should get a medal."
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