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6/4/08

EU-Digest: Flower Industry - How safe are the flowers you are buying

A special EU-Digest report about environmentally unsafe practices by the flower industry

How safe are the flowers you are buying

The flower industry keeps those flowers perfect for our enjoyment with a heavy douse of chemical fertilizers, insecticides, growth hormones, fungicides, and highly toxic pesticides. Imports can have unregistered chemicals or those otherwise banned because of the high costs at stake. If bugs are found in the cargo, the entire lot can be rejected. Studies have found more than 50% more pesticides on flowers than the allowable limit on produce; roses had 1000 times more cancer-causing pesticides than food! The pesticides used are very strong toxic chemicals. They travel to neighboring farms and into their water supply. Many of these chemicals are listed as "category 1" and include the most hazardous of chemicals (Methyl Bromide). Some of these chemicals are known to deplete our ozone layer and cause birth defects. When you touch a chemically treated conventional flower, you get poisons on your skin which can be ingested when you put your hand to your face or your child's face or can even penetrate your body through your skin. When you smell the fragrance, you are also inhaling poisons. Worse yet, the workers (many sorely underpaid) on flower farms and in green houses usually work in toxic environments. Studies show that they are exposed to 60 times the "safe" standard. As you can imagine, the toxic fumes are intensified in green houses! And as the farm hands return from work toxic chemicals also enter their homes and into the lives and bodies of their children and loved ones. But it does not end there. When the flowers are shipped and arrive at their destinations around the world, health hazards can now also enter the home of the consumer. This time with the addition of usually environmentally unfriendly packaging.

Have you ever checked if the packaging or sleeves around the flowers you are buying are made from recyclable and sustainable materials. Like corn-based flower sleeve made from polylactic acid (PLA), a natural, rapidly biodegradable alternative to traditional petroleum based cellophane sleeves used by most flower companies! Are they safe to the environment, can they be recycled? Do the flowers you buy carry a sticker which says that the flowers are eco-friendly and have not been treated with poisonous chemicals?

The next time you buy flowers for someone or for some special occasion, make sure they are not only appealing to the eye, but also carry a label guaranteeing they are eco-friendly. These are all serious questions that need to be addressed by the multi-billion flower industry, which at the moment seems to be burying their head in the sand.

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