Athens, Georgia
April 13, 2006
Source:
Georgia
Faces
The University of Georgia
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
By Brad Haire
University of Georgia
Methyl bromide, a chemical used by
vegetable farmers to control pests, is being phased out of use
in the United States. University of Georgia experts have
developed an alternative method farmers could use.
The United Nations
Environmental Program began the phase-out of methyl bromide in
1992. The program was authorized by the Montreal Protocol, a
treaty signed by the United States and more than 180 other
countries to control ozone-depleting substances. The phase- out
was to be completed by Jan. 1, 2005. Existing stockpiles could
be used, but the United States wasn’t allowed to import or
produce methyl bromide after that.
“Nobody knows how long the
current stockpiles will last,” said Terry Kelley, a vegetable
horticulturist with the UGA Cooperative Extension. “But
speculation is that they will be exhausted in 2008.”
For years, farmers have planted
some vegetables in planting beds covered in plastic, which helps
them consistently control the growing environment for
high-valued vegetable crops like tomatoes, eggplants, squash,
strawberries and peppers. Methyl bromide has been an effective,
economical way to sterilize these beds against diseases and
problem weeds prior to planting, Kelley said.
“No one single fumigant could
do what methyl bromide could do for vegetable growers,” Kelley
said.
Scientists with the UGA College
of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences knew this was the
biggest problem facing the vegetable industry. They have been
trying to find alternatives.
One alternative method that
shows promise uses a combination of three chemicals, Telone II,
chloropicrin and Metam, said David Langston, a CAES plant
pathologist. All three chemicals are labeled for use on
vegetables.
Langston and Stanley Culpepper,
a CAES weed scientist, began looking at this “three-way” system
in 1999. Research literature from the 1980s shows it could work.
But it needed tweaking.
“What we have done is refine
the system,” Langston said.
For the three-way system to
work, a farmer needs to know how to apply the chemicals in order
and deliver each chemical to a specific depth and location in
the bed. The soil needs to be moist, too, but not too moist.
To cover beds, farmers use
several different farm implements on different tractors. The
CAES scientists have developed new tractor implements to help
farmers safely and accurately deliver each chemical in the
three-way system without adding additional trips over a field.
The price of methyl bromide has
tripled in the past decade. It currently costs vegetable farmers
about $450 per acre to use. The chemicals for the three-way
system cost about $360 per acre.
But with one use of methyl
bromide, farmers can often plant two to three consecutive
vegetable crops before reworking the plastic beds.
It is unclear how many crops
one three-way treatment will be able to consistently cover,
Langston said.
Langston and Culpepper are
testing the three-way system on three farms in south Georgia
this spring. They are also testing different plastic types to
see which works best with the system.
The CAES experts are producing
an educational DVD to train Georgia’s vegetable industry and
farmers who want to try the three-way methyl bromide
alternative.
Because no alternative for
methyl bromide has been found, the United States and other
countries have received “critical-use exemptions,” said Kelley,
who has helped the Georgia Fruit and Vegetable Growers
Association compile and prepare the critical- use exemption
application. This allows limited importation and production of
methyl bromide for use in the United States.
In 2005, the United States was
allowed to import or produce about 17 million pounds of methyl
bromide, about 30 percent of what was allowed in 1991. The U.S.
exemption this year allows for 15 million pounds. |