Tuesday, January 30, 2007 by: M.T. Whitney, citizen journalist
(Natural News) The waters off the
The report, released by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, shows that the pesticide, which companies dumped into the water soon after it was banned from use in the United States, is still found with high levels in fish caught near the Los Angeles area. DDT, banned from use in the
In a survey of DDT levels in fish conducted in 2002, the EPA found that the amount of DDT in fish caught off the
"Since 1985, fish consumption advisories and health warnings have been posted in southern
The major source of DDT in the ocean comes from DDT manufacturing chemical plants in the area that dumped DDT into the local wastewater systems. These sewers then lead to the ocean.
One company, Montrose Chemical Corp., is estimated to have released more than 2,000 tons of DDT between 1947 and 1971, reported the Associated Press. Montrose ceased manufacture of DDT in 1983, ten years after it was banned in the
In 2000, the EPA reached a $73 million lawsuit settlement with four companies that owned DDT manufacturing plants in
The EPA estimates that between 1942 up to its ban in 1972, approximately 675,000 tons of DDT have been applied or sprayed in the
Since the 1970, most industrialized countries have banned the use of DDT. However, many scientists have rallied against a proposed worldwide ban on DDT, arguing that the insecticide can play an important role in fighting malaria. In September 2006, the World Health Organization recommended using DDT indoors as one of three methods to fight it.
Malaria, although eradicated from North America and
http://www.naturalnews.com/021527_DDT_water_pollution_EPA.html
DDT is a white, crystalline, water-insolublesince 1973.
No comments:
Post a Comment