Pesticide
residues in wine:
something
to be concerned about?

The recent press release (here)
by Pesticide Action Network (PAN)(Europe) makes for rather alarming
reading. Titled Message in a
bottle, it reports the results of tests on 40 bottles of wine
purchased within the European Union. ‘European wines systematically
contaminated with pesticide residues’, is the conclusion. The report
comments: ‘Together the 34 bottles of conventional wine contained
148 pesticide residues. All 34 bottles contained at least one
pesticide, while the mean number of pesticides per bottle was more
than four. The highest number of residues found in a single bottle was
10.’ Does this mean wine drinkers are in danger, and that there is a
systematic failure by regulatory bodies to do the appropriate
monitoring?
Anxious to get to the bottom of all this, I did a bit
of research on the pesticides involved and the concentrations that
were found in the wine. My initial conclusion? The report seems to be
a bit of scaremongering. The actual results are also found on the PAN
website (http://www.pan-europe.info/Media/PR/080326.html),
and the levels of the various pesticides encountered are given in
micrograms per litre. Now this is in the range of parts per billion (1
μg/kg = part per billion, and a litre of wine weighs
approximately 1 kg), which is incredibly low. It’s all about the
concentration. And if we look at what the pesticides are, they turn
out to be fairly benign chemicals that will only have any adverse
effects on health at extremely high levels.
Toxicity testing of agrochemicals involves looking at
their effects at high concentrations, assuming that those who will
work with them risk exposure to them in undiluted form. There are
strict regulations concerning their use, and also concerning residue
levels that are permitted in food. The regulations err on the side of
safety. From the information widely available on the internet, it
seems that the residue levels present in wine are not going to have
any negative health effects.
However, I can understand why the results cause
concern. If a chemical has the potential to be carcinogenic, should we
be using it at all on wine grapes? Wouldn’t it be safer not to use
any pesticides at all if there is a risk that they might end up in
wine? While this position sounds a sensible one, it ignores the fact
that many substances are harmless at normal levels of exposure, but
with repeated exposure at high concentrations they can be
carcinogenic, or toxic in other ways. Let’s give an example. It
could be that the active ingredient in sunscreen (and I’m making
this up), when used at 100 times the concentration found in commercial
preparations, can cause cancer when rubbed on the ears of laboratory
rats every day for a year. Does this mean that sunscreen is
carcinogenic? No. There is such a dose that has no observable adverse
effects, and to avoid using sunscreen because of worries about health
could end up putting you in much worse danger. It is entirely possible
that for many compounds there is a threshold effect for
carcinogenesis: at a certain level a harmless substance crosses this
threshold and then becomes harmful.
It is illogical to reject extremely useful, safe
fungicides just because if you were to drink the stuff neat it would
harm you. If you have an ideological objection to systemic fungicides
on the grounds that they are ‘artificial’, and prefer to use
sulphur and copper because you see them as natural, that is your
right. But you can’t claim that systemic fungicides are going to
harm people if studies have shown they are only harmful at much higher
levels than are used in practice.
In no way do I wish to be labelled as an apologist for
the agrochemical industry, and I deplore the over-reliance of chemical
‘solutions’ in farming. I’m a big supporter of integrated pest
management/agriculture raisonée/integrated farming approaches, and
I’m sympathetic to organics and biodynamics. But I think a press
release like this has the potential to mislead people, first by
suggesting that all synthetic fungicides are dangerous (they aren’t
– they’re a relatively safe group of agrochemicals) and secondly
by suggesting that wine is riddled with dangerous levels of residues
(which from these results it doesn’t seem to be). In an ideal world
wine would have no residues at all. But residue levels well under what
is considered, rather conservatively, to have the potential to harm
are not concerning.
Below I have compiled some brief notes and further
reading on the major agrochemicals mentioned in the PAN report. The
LD50 values quoted are the levels of these chemicals which cause half
of the animals tested to die. MRL refers to maximum residue limit.
These figures are all in mg/kg (this is the same as parts per million,
ppm). Bear in mind that the average person weighs 70 kg, and that 1 mg
= 1000 μg (the unit quoted in the PAN report).
Dimethomorph
A morpholine fungicide that acts systemically, this is a cinnamic acid
derivative that is only slightly toxic to mammals. Inhibits the
formation of fungal cell walls: mammals don’t have these.
LD50 mouse = 3900 mg/kg; rat = 5000 mg/kg
Reported as not likely to be a human carcinogen
Pyrimethanil
An anilinopyrimidine fungicide
LD50 rat = 4150 mg/kg
Not acutely toxic (EPA)
European MRL = 3mg/kg on winegrapes; USA MRL = 5mg/kg
ADI (acceptable daily intake) = 0.17 mg/kg bodyweight
Carmendazim
A systemic benzimidazole fungicide that has low toxicity and is
rapidly excreted. Inhibits beta tubulin synthesis (microtubules), but
fortunately doesn’t work on mammals.
LD50 in rats and mice is over 15000 mg/kg
Acceptable daily intake of 0-0.03 mg/kg b.w. was set by the JMPR in
1995
Bad for earthworms
Cyprodinil
An anilinopyrimidine fungicide
Acceptable daily intake = 0.03 mg/kg bodyweight per day
(EU)
MRL in grapes = 5 ppm (JFCRF); residue tolerance (EPA) = 2 ppm
Residues unlikely to represent a public health concern (JMPR)
Azoxystrobin
systemic, broad-spectrum fungicide methoxyacrylate
compound used as a preventive and curative systemic fungicide
LD50 >5000 mg/kg for rats
Unlikely to be a carcinogen
MRL in grapes = 10 ppm (JFCRF)
Degraded
rapidly under agricultural field conditions with a soil half-life of
less than 2 weeks; sensitive to photolysis
Procymidone
A dicarboximide fungicide
LD50 mice and rats >5000 mg/kg
Iprodione
Dicarboximide fungicide
MRL = 25 ppb (JFCRF)
LD50 rat >4400 mg/kg (EPA)
LD50 rat > 2000 mg/kg bw (EU)
Rapidly eliminated from the body and breaks down quickly in the soil
See also:
UK
Pesticide Residues Committee
http://www.pesticides.gov.uk/prc.asp?id=824
Table of MRLs in food from the Japan Food Chemical
Residues Foundation:
For grapes http://www.m5.ws001.squarestart.ne.jp/foundation/fooddtl.php?f_inq=10800
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