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Donor policies on pesticide donations:
pest and pesticide management

By Mr. Robert C. Hedlund, Integrated Pest Management adviser, USAID

   This paper was initially prepared for USAID by Rich Tobin, Winrock International. It examines the environmental consequences of the pesticide policies of bilateral donor agencies that are designed to promote agricultural trade or production in sub-Saharan Africa. The analysis focuses on bilateral development assistance in France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States.
   Particular attention is paid to USAID policies from 1961 to the present. In the 1960s, USAID was reluctant to impose United States values or policy preferences on recipients of United States assistance. Throughout the decade, USAID allowed all recipients of its assistance to purchase any pesticides they desired and to determine how these pesticides would be used within their borders. In 1971, USAID developed a "positive list" of commodities, including pesticides that were eligible for agency financing.
   By 1994, the approved list contained more than 90 different active ingredients available in almost 275 different package and unit sizes. From July 1972 until March 1976, USAID financed approximately 9 000 tonnes of pesticides. In 1995, four United States environmental groups filed suits against USAID alleging the agency had been negligent in considering the potential environmental impacts of its procurement of pesticides. USAID lost the suit and was required to prepare an environmental impact statement on its pesticide procurement policies. One result of this was USAID's decision to issue comprehensive regulations governing the environmental assessment of all its activities, including pesticide procurement.
   Final regulations were published in 1976 (in 22 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 216) and are referred to as Reg. 16. The regulations strongly discourage procurement of pesticides for purposes other than specific project assistance. Since the publication of Reg. 16, only one non-project assistance procurement of pesticides has been approved, for the emergency use of pesticides in a disaster relief programme in Bolivia.
   USAID hopes that Reg. 16 will encourage bilateral donors, especially Japan which provides as much as 50 to 75 percent of total imports of pesticides to many African countries, to follow its example.

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