Journal retracts glyphosate safety paper over ethical issues

The journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology has retracted a 2000 paper claiming glyphosate is safe for humans, citing undisclosed Monsanto involvement and reliance on unpublished studies. This development highlights ongoing concerns about the herbicide's regulation in the US. Meanwhile, stingless bees in Peru's Amazon have gained legal rights in two regions for the first time.

In a significant move, editors of the journal Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology retracted a widely cited 2000 paper titled “Safety evaluation and risk assessment of the herbicide roundup and its active ingredient, glyphosate, for humans” by Williams et al. The retraction, published in 2026, revealed that the evaluation relied solely on unpublished studies from Monsanto, the glyphosate inventor later acquired by Bayer AG. Monsanto employees contributed to the paper without disclosure, and the authors received undisclosed financial compensation from the company.

The notice also pointed out that the paper excluded multiple long-term chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity studies available in 1999, despite the authors' awareness of them. It described the weight-of-evidence approach as sound in principle but potentially biased by these omissions and influences. This paper had long supported arguments that glyphosate does not cause cancer and was referenced by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in safety assessments.

Glyphosate, a key ingredient in Roundup, is applied to millions of acres yearly, including pre-harvest on grains like wheat and oats, leading to residues in food products. Previous reporting in Bee Culture noted its sub-lethal effects on honey bees, such as cognitive decline, impaired learning and memory, gut biome disruption, and premature aging (Conrad, 2018). Over 165,000 lawsuits have been filed against Bayer regarding Roundup and glyphosate.

In a related environmental advance, two Peruvian regions—Satipo province in the Central Amazon and Nauta in the northeast—passed ordinances in early January 2026 granting legal rights to stingless bees. These bees, vital for pollinating crops like cacao, coffee, and avocados, as well as much of the rainforest flora, face threats from deforestation, climate change, and pesticides. An online petition on Avaaz.org seeks to extend these protections nationwide. The move recognizes the bees' cultural and medicinal importance to indigenous Amazon communities.

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President Trump signs executive order boosting glyphosate production using Defense Production Act, defended by RFK Jr., as MAHA activists protest outside.
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Trump executive order invoking Defense Production Act to boost glyphosate supply triggers backlash from MAHA activists

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President Donald Trump has signed an executive order invoking the Defense Production Act to shore up U.S. supplies of glyphosate and its key input, elemental phosphorus—an action that has drawn sharp criticism from parts of the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement even as Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. defended the move as a national security measure.

Bayer has reached a class-action settlement in the US worth up to 7.25 billion USD to resolve current and future lawsuits over the herbicide Roundup. It requires approval from the court in St. Louis. The cases stem from the 2018 acquisition of Monsanto.

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Pollinators like bees and butterflies are essential for global food production but face severe decline due to habitat loss and pesticides. A recent assessment highlights that over one in five North American pollinators risks extinction. Home gardeners can help by planting native species to provide critical nectar sources.

A voluntary agreement to curb soy-driven deforestation in the Amazon is collapsing amid political shifts in Brazil. The Brazilian Association of Vegetable Oil Industries announced plans to withdraw following the elimination of tax benefits in Mato Grosso state. Experts warn this could accelerate rainforest loss and undermine sustainability efforts.

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