Supreme Court bans Endosulfan for eight weeks

The Supreme Court Friday banned the production, distribution and use of endosulfan because the pesticide has debilitating effects on humans and the environment.

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court today banned the production, sale and use of controversial pesticide Endosulfan in the country for the next eight weeks, holding that human life is more important than anything else.

"Keeping in mind various judgements of this court under Article 21 (right to life and liberty) of the Constitution and particularly keeping in mind the precautionary principle we, hereby, direct and pass ad-interim order for immediate ban on production and use of Endosulfan all over India," a bench headed by Chief Justice S H Kapadia said.

The bench also directed the statutory authorities to freeze the production licences granted to the manufacturers of the controversial pesticide till its further order.

The bench also ordered two separate detailed studies on the adverse effects of Endosulfan on human life and environment by two committees, headed respectively by Indian Council Medical Research (ICMR) director general and the agricultural commissioner and sought their reports within eight weeks.

It said the report submitted to the court will be the amalgamation of the above two expert committees' reports.

The bench said the expert committee will submit its interim report on whether the pesticide should be banned or its existing stock should be eliminated in phases and if there is any alternative to the controversial pesticide.
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During the hearing, the bench said that human life is more important than anything else.

The court passed its order on petition filed by CPIM's youth wing Democratic Youth Federation of India (DYFI) seeking country-wide ban on sale and production of Endosulfan in its present form or any other derivatives in the market.

DYFI had contended in its petition that a large section of people was directly affected because of the use of Endosulfan, already banned in 81 countries.

The petitioner had said several studies had documented that the pesticide could also affect human development. It gave example of serious health hazards caused in Kerala's Kasaragod district.
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According to the petitioner, researchers studying children from an isolated village in Kasaragod district have linked Endosulfan exposure to delays in sexual maturity among boys.

Endosulfan is an off-patent organochlorine insecticide and acaricide.
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The petitioner had said that Endosulfan was the only pesticide applied to cashew plantations in Kasaragod for 20 years and contaminated the environment there.
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