Pesticide Action Network

Berkeley, California, 94704-1015 United States

Mission Statement

PAN works to eliminate hazardous pesticides by linking consumer, labor, health, environment and agriculture groups internationally to advance safer, ecologically sound pest control alternatives.

About This Cause

In 1982, the luster of the “Green Revolution” in developing countries had faded. The promised dramatic increases in yields from “miracle” hybrid grains that required high inputs of water, chemical fertilizers and pesticides failed to deliver and were revealed as campaigns to sell technology to people who couldn’t afford it. The global pesticide trade was, however, yielding dramatic profits as more and more farmers were trapped on a pesticide treadmill. That was the world when PAN was founded. Chemical-intensive, mono-crop, irrigated agriculture, introduced in the Global South in the 1950s, boosted crop yields at first, but by the '70s, the costs in health, ecological damage, and lost biodiversity were mounting—and pests were growing resistant to pesticides. Meanwhile, transnational corporations and local elites profited at the expense of local communities who were losing control over their own food systems. Women and children shouldered more of the fieldwork—and bore the brunt of the pesticide exposure. In the years since PAN was founded, the Green Revolution has been reassessed and new approaches have been added. When rice production was collapsing in the 1980s due to pest resurgence from resistance to pesticides, Indonesia needed alternatives. A combination of community-scale peer-learning projects recaptured Indigenous farming knowledge and wove it into new ecological pest management. “Farmer Field Schools”—today adapted to local needs in many countries—returned bountiful crops of rice while expenditures on agrichemicals were slashed. Meanwhile, Indonesia and other countries began banning PAN’s “Dirty Dozen Pesticides.” By 2002, more than a million Indonesian farmers had participated in Field Schools that became models for localized sustainable agriculture in other countries.But the companies that profited from the Green Revolution—today consolidated into six mega-corporations—were opening a second front in their ongoing effort to control the world’s food supply. The “Gene Revolution” is designed to make farmers dependent on patented seeds “owned” by the corporations. Many of these biotech seeds are genetically engineered to withstand heavier applications of proprietary herbicides produced by the same transnationals. The goal is to colonize nature while perpetuating the pesticide treadmill. Many governments have rejected GM seed, and peoples' movements are fighting back. PAN North America links these struggles in the Global South with similar battles in our own region. On Native lands, inside urban canyons and across the face of rural America, our scientists and partners are testing the air for pesticide drift and water for pesticide pollution. We’re joining neighbors from Canada to Mexico in resisting further imposition of genetically engineered crops. And we’re helping create a domestic Fair Trade movement to support family farms and guarantee living wages and safer conditions for farmworkers. Our commitment is to a truly green revolution, one that includes not only a sustainable agriculture, but most important, expansion of human rights to food, justice and self-determination.

Pesticide Action Network
2029 University Ave Suite 200
Berkeley, California 94704-1015
United States
Phone 510-788-9020
Unique Identifier 942949686