by ,http://vietnamnews.vn/society/522232/dangerous-weedkiller-still-used-despite-ban.html04 July 2019 Last updated at 17:20 PM
HÀ NỘI — Despite its negative effects on human health and the environment and a Government ban from February, Paraquat is still being traded in Việt Nam, the Vietnam News Agency has reported.
Paraquat, a chemical weedkiller, and 2,4-D, an organic compound, have been used to control weeds in Việt Nam since the 1990s.
2,4-D paraquat can be found in many commercial lawn herbicide mixtures. More than 1,500 herbicide products contain 2,4-D as an active ingredient.
In February 2017, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development issued a decree prohibiting the use of plant protection products containing paraquat and 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) in Việt Nam yet still allowed the trade and use of the products for two years starting from when the ban became effective, meaning this February.
The department head Hoàng Trung said they were working on a draft circular promulgating the list of plant protection drugs permitted for use, restricted for use or banned from use in Việt Nam.
Until then, Paraquat will be officially banned.
However, earlier this year, Việt Nam Pesticide Association acknowledged that the ministry and its Plant Protection Department had allowed the An Nông Company in the Mekong Delta province of Long An to export and continue using 208 tonnes of packed herbicide products containing Paraquat in Việt Nam.
“We do not favour any company. The amount of packed Paraquat-containing products is small and held by distributors, making it impossible for them to export or withdraw,” Trung said.
“Destroying these products is costly and harmful to the environment if companies and people do not properly follow protocol. Therefore, the department decided to let them trade these products until September 30,” he added.
According to Trung, the department has also asked the ministry to ban 14 substances and 1,706 herbicide products including Paraquat, following scientists’ warnings about its dangers. — VNS