Study: Glyphosate Does Not Cause Cancer

A field of corn grows on Dec. 23, 2011. Photo by Regis Lefebure.

“Long-term Study Finds That the Pesticide Glyphosate Does Not Cause Cancer,” By Katarina Zimmer.

A new study has found no conclusive link between exposure to glyphosate—the main ingredient in a popular weedkiller—and cancer.

The new study, which was seen by Reuters, draws on long-term data collected through the Agricultural Health Study. This has monitored the health of nearly 90,000 people in Iowa and North Carolina from 1993 to 2010, including farmers licensed to apply pesticides to their crops, and their spouses. The researchers tell Reuters that among more than 54,000 pesticide applications taken into account in the study, 83 percent contained glyphosate. Yet they found no significant increase in cancers among those exposed to the chemical.

The widespread use of glyphosate, which is the main ingredient in Monsanto’s herbicide Roundup, has become increasingly controversial as studies have produced mixed results on the hazards it poses to humans.  Read more.

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