Context:
The Union Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare has restricted the use of glyphosate, a widely used herbicide, citing health hazards for humans and animals.

Relevance:
GS III: Agriculture
Dimensions of the Article:
- What is Glyphosate?
 - Health impacts of glyphosate
 
What is Glyphosate?
- Glyphosate is an herbicide. It is applied to the leaves of plants to kill both broadleaf plants and grasses.
 - The sodium salt form of glyphosate is used to regulate plant growth and ripen specific crops.
 - Glyphosate is one of the most widely used herbicide.
 - In India, glyphosate has been approved for use only in tea plantations and non-plantation areas accompanying the tea crop.
 - Use of the substance anywhere else is illegal.
 - It prevents the plants from making certain proteins that are needed for plant growth.
 - Glyphosate stops a specific enzyme pathway, the shikimic acid
 - The shikimic acid pathway is necessary for plants and some microorganisms.
 
Recent ban:
- Only authorized Pest Control Operators are allowed to use it.
 - Earlier, state governments of Maharashtra, Telangana, Punjab and Andhra Pradesh have tried similar steps but failed.
 - The ban notification was based on a 2019 report by the Government of Kerala on prohibiting the distribution, sale and use of glyphosate and its derivatives.
 - Some 35 countries have banned or restricted the use of glyphosate.
- These include Sri Lanka, Netherlands, France, Colombia, Canada, Israel and Argentina.
 
 
Health impacts of glyphosate:
- Health impacts of glyphosate range from cancer, and reproductive and developmental toxicity to neurotoxicity and immune toxicity.
 - Symptoms include irritation, swelling, burning of the skin, oral and nasal discomfort, unpleasant taste and blurred vision.
 
-Source: Indian Express
				

