 The soil of the
century lottery
11/28/2004 by Chris
Barton

Aucklanders are worried that the soil
contamination scare may affect property values, but it is also
worth looking at their health.
Picture / Martin
Sykes |
Helen
Leach Leach's 1955 Yates' Garden Guide has an alarming
method for dealing to brown beetle: "Protective measures include
spraying the trees early in November with Arsenate of Lead, one
ounce to three gallons of water ... or DDT 50 per cent, one ounce to
six gallons of water can be used instead."
The Otago
University professor of anthropology and garden historian says
that's just one example of how home gardeners have been pouring
toxic chemicals on to their properties for years.
The 1955
Yates guide also recommends Aretan (an organic mercurial compound),
Hexone (a "new phosphate insecticide"),
lindane, and Paris Green
(copper acetoarsenite) for slug baits. "For sections with gorse,
blackberry or buttercups, it sang the praises of 2,4-D and
2,4,5-T."
Leach says that sort of advice, which continued to
the 1970s, adds a new layer to Auckland's soil contamination
problems.
The chemicals and heavy metals she's talking about
are those found at toxic levels in several Auckland horticultural
sites and which may affect thousands of home owners who've built on
such locations.
Leach contends that problem is far more
widespread. Home gardens all over the country are undoubtedly also
contaminated. As you spray, so shall you reap.
"Home gardeners have traditionally been some of the worst users of
pesticides," says Meriel Watts, co-ordinator of the Pesticide Action
Network. "Because they don't have training and often don't know what
they're doing, there's been a tendency to overuse
chemicals."
She points out that DDT was still in use under
permit until 1989, was used widely on parks and bowling greens, and
even though it was banned in 1970 still shows up in household
collections by councils of toxic chemicals. "This contamination goes
a lot wider than these horticultural soils."
Leach says our
chemical dependence spans a century - beginning in the 1890s, when
glasshouses were routinely fumigated with cyanide, and arsenic and
all manner of horrific substances were in common use.
"That
was the period in which chemistry was seen as having the answer to
all the gardeners' and farmers' problems."
From World War II
the chemicals changed to organochlorines such as DDT, dieldrin and lindane. And while a more organic message can be found in today's
gardening guides, it sits alongside one that continues to preach the
chemical path.
"There is a long history of chemicals that
have been recommended to us as being perfectly okay to use with no
after-effects. And then later we are told they are no longer any
good or they have unforeseen health consequences."
While
Aucklanders worry about the decline of property values resulting
from the contamination scare, should they also be worried about
their health?
"Overall, it's an issue that is worthwhile
dealing with," says Auckland Medical Officer of Health, David
Sinclair.
"Particularly in areas where hotspots were found.
There could be quite significant levels of exposure."
He says
children are most at risk. They are developmentally more susceptible
and more likely to be exposed - through play, picking things up off
the ground and sometimes eating soil.
He agrees there could
be hotspots in home gardens - in places where there have been
chemical spills or heavy uses of pesticides, possibly around home
glasshouses or garden sheds.
But he points out there are
multiple ways people can be exposed to contaminants. Lead exposure,
for example, can also come from paint and petrol.
Low-level
soil contamination, he says, should be seen in the context of "a
general acceptance that we do live in a contaminated environment" -
a legacy of the past. "There's not a great deal that we can do about
it - it's there and it's adding to our overall exposure from
multiple sources."
Just what health effects might occur from
exposure to pesticides varies widely - dependent on the person, the
level of toxicity, the chemical and a range of other factors. It's a
set of variables that make it difficult to prove, or disprove, a
causal link between exposure and ill-health.
But as the
Auckland City Council points out in its weed management policy, both
the World Health Organisation and the United States Environmental
Protection Agency do report "a wide variety of known adverse health
effects resulting from exposure to herbicides".
The list is
daunting: skin and eye irritation, cancer, immune dysregulation,
reproductive effects such as miscarriage and birth deformities,
developmental and behavioural abnormalities, neurological effects,
respiratory disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, heart and blood
disorders, kidney failure and liver damage.
In 1997, the
Ministries for the Environment and Health set acceptable levels for
arsenic (30 milligrams per kilogram of dry weight) and copper (80
mg/kg) in soils. But they have yet to set safe guidelines for many
other soil contaminants, including DDT, dieldrin, lead and
zinc.
Ingestion, absorption through skin, and inhalation as
dust are direct ways soil contaminants can affect humans. The more
significant issue, however, is the way pesticides get into the food
chain from produce grown on contaminated soil. They are mainly heavy
metals, which don't disperse and compounds such as DDT, which take
decades to break down.
Our Food Safety Authority sets safe
levels - "maximum residue limits" - for such contaminants in food
and checks they're being adhered with its total diet survey of the
foods we eat. The limits are the basis for further standards -
"acceptable daily intakes" or "provisional tolerable weekly intakes"
for contaminants.
But co-chair of the Soil and Health
Association Steffan Browning says the authority is missing a crucial
point. "We think residues full stop are undesirable."
Watts
agrees: "We take issue with their attitude that it's actually okay
to have contamination." Both say as well as setting safe limits, the
authority should be setting targets for reducing residues in
food.
Watts believes the Ministry for the Environment, blind
to the wider picture, will adopt the same regulatory approach when
setting acceptable contaminant levels in soil.
"I'm
concerned they're going to develop safe levels that will be juggled
to fit with the levels of contamination, so we get rid of the
problem by saying it's safe."
Food Safety Authority executive
director Andrew McKenzie adopts what might be called a pragmatic
position: that pesticide levels in food have been falling and
testing techniques have improved - so that if a pesticide has been
used, some residue, however small, is likely to be
found.
"There's a consumer perception, a fear that pesticides
are terrible things," says McKenzie. "DDT was an environmental
issue. It wasn't a human health issue. It's not a health risk to
humans - not at the levels you find in foods at present, but it does
a hell of good job killing mosquitoes in other parts of the
world."
Browning strongly disagrees, arguing the authority's
attitude is reactive and risky rather than proactive and safe.
Take for example the fungicide chlorothalonil, which in the
last total diet survey was found at a level of 0.175mg/kg in celery
in Auckland. The authority's maximum residue level is 15mg/kg - so
the levels found are insignificant. Not so, says Browning, pointing
out that chlorothalonil is a potential human carcinogen, known to
affect the kidney and bladder in experimental animals.
"The
authority says I'm scaremongering because it's not at dangerous
levels, but it is only a matter of time before chlorothalonil will
not be allowed in our food for whatever reason."
McKenzie
dismisses the argument: "If we thought it [chlorothalonil] was a bit
dangerous then we would take it off [the market]".
He says
the authority doesn't wait for years until science proves a
substance is dangerous, but acts as soon as there are any reasonable
concerns.
Meanwhile chlorothalonil stays in our celery and
other pesticides stay in our soil. And in the battle between the
compost heap and the chemicals, the chemicals are still winning.
As we spray, so shall we eat.
Copyright © 2004, APN Holdings NZ Ltd
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