The National Times - US Supreme Court agrees to hear Monsanto weedkiller case

US Supreme Court agrees to hear Monsanto weedkiller case


US Supreme Court agrees to hear Monsanto weedkiller case
US Supreme Court agrees to hear Monsanto weedkiller case / Photo: © GETTY IMAGES/AFP/File

The US Supreme Court agreed on Friday to hear a bid by German chemicals giant Bayer to put an end to a wave of lawsuits over the weedkiller Roundup.

Change text size:

Bayer has spent more than $10 billion settling litigation linked to Roundup since it acquired its producer, the US agrochemical group Monsanto, in 2018.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer considers glyphosate, one of Roundup's ingredients, a probable human carcinogen, but Bayer says scientific studies and regulatory approvals show the weedkiller is safe.

The top US court agreed to hear Bayer's appeal of a $1.25 million award to a Missouri man who claimed Roundup was responsible for his blood cancer -- one of thousands of similar "failure-to-warn" lawsuits facing the company.

Bayer is arguing that it should be shielded from state lawsuits since the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved the sale of Roundup to consumers and farmers without any warnings.

The Trump administration has backed Bayer's stance that a federal statute on pesticide labels preempts state laws requiring warnings on products that may be carcinogenic.

In a brief, Solicitor General John Sauer said the EPA had "for decades" classified glyphosate as "not likely to be carcinogenic in humans," arguing that the agency's determination should preempt state rules on the matter.

The Missouri case means "a jury may second-guess the agency's science-based judgments," Sauer said. "A manufacturer should not be left to '50 different labeling regimes.'"

Bayer CEO Bill Anderson welcomed the Supreme Court's decision to take the case.

"It is time for the US legal system to establish that companies should not be punished under state laws for complying with federal warning label requirements," Anderson said in a statement.

Lori Ann Burd, the environmental health director at the Center for Biological Diversity, expressed disappointment.

"It's a sad day in America when our highest court agrees to consider depriving thousands of Roundup users suffering from cancer of their day in court," Burd said in a statement.

"Bayer keeps losing on the facts about its own product so now it's asking the court to prevent juries from ever again hearing those facts," she added.

The Supreme Court is expected to hear the case in the spring and issue a ruling by June or early July.

B.Cooper--TNT

Featured

Mysterious world beyond Pluto may have an atmosphere: astronomers

A tiny, little-known world beyond Pluto appears to have an atmosphere, Japanese astronomers said Monday, defying what had been thought possible for icy objects in our cosmic backyard.

Datavault AI and CyberCatch Announce Signing of Binding Letter of Intent for Datavault AI to Acquire CyberCatch to Accelerate AI-Driven, Quantum-Resistant Cyber Risk Mitigation Solutions

Strategic acquisition is anticipated to position Datavault AI to bring CyberCatch's AI-enabled cyber risk mitigation solution into Datavault AI's SanQtum-secured edge Graphics Processing Unit ecosystem, addressing a global information security market projected to reach $240 billion in 2026 (Gartner)CyberCatch's post-quantum cryptography conversion plan is also expected to position the combined company ahead of the AI-enabled "Q-Day" quantum-attack horizon, now compressed to as early as 2029 (Google)AI-enabled adversary attacks in 2025 rose 89% year-over-year while average eCrime breakout time fell to 29 minutes, a 65% increase in adversary speed compared to 2024, per CrowdStrike's 2026 Global Threat Report, and Google Quantum AI research has now compressed the timeline for cryptographically relevant quantum computing to as early as 2029.

Apple earnings beat forecasts on iPhone 17 demand

Apple on Thursday said it had its best start to the year ever when it came to earnings, with iPhone demand and digital service sales helping it beat expectations.

Musk grilled on AI profits at OpenAI trial

Elon Musk sparred with lawyers for a third day Thursday at his California trial against OpenAI, struggling to explain why his own for-profit AI empire differs from the one he is trying to take down.

Change text size: