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Friday, July 16, 2021

PART 2: Napa: The Dark Side–"Green Farming" Includes Herbicides and Fungicides

NON-ORGANIC VINEYARDS: HERBICIDE AND FUNGICIDE USE

Most wineries in Napa still use glyphosate or glufosinate ammonium for weed control. 

In 2018, more than 22,000 acres–about half of the vines–were sprayed with glyphosate (the listed active ingredient in Roundup), an herbicide that is still permitted under the county's Napa Green sustainable standard. Another 6,640 were sprayed with glufosinate ammonium.

The total number of acres in vine is roughly 44,000. 

Here's where the glyphosate is used:


All data displayed is from California Dept. of Pesticide Regulation; mapped by California Dept. of Health's Agricultural Pesticide Mapping Tool.

You can generate your own maps at that link, searching for various chemicals including the other form of glyphosate-isopropylamine salt and glufosinate ammonium. The tool also lets you select chemicals by class: carcinogens, developmental and reproductive toxins, endocrine disruptors and more.

For more, visit https://trackingcalifornia.org/pesticides/pesticide-mapping-tool

Fungicides, including neonicotinoids–which are highly toxic to bees, birds and butterflies (including Monarchs)–are more widely used. 

Their use is permitted under Napa Green standards.

See the next post in this series.

2 comments:

  1. What is the source of this information? Please include some documentation.

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  2. All data from California Dept. of Pesticide Regulation (DPR); mapped by California Dept. of Health's Agricultural Pesticide Mapping Tool at https://trackingcalifornia.org/pesticides/pesticide-mapping-tool. The underlying data from DPR was also a link in the second sentence of this blog post.

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