b'conazole(toxicfungicide),fenpyrox-imate(toxicacaricide),cyprodinil (carcinogenicfungicide),Tuinoxyfen (toxicfungicide),clothianidin(toxic insecticide),trinexapac-ethyl(plant growth regulator), and ethiprole (toxic insecticide). For those substances with major negative environmental impacts, the European Union, Switzerland, and the NHF strongly objected to their con-tinued use, while CropLife, the United States,Uganda,andtwoothertrade organizations countered that environ-mental considerations do not belong at Codex. In reply, I told the delegates that you cannot separate human health fUom enviUonmental health\x0f as Ze osh osh fUom the sea\x0f biUds fly in the aiU\x0f and crops are grown in soil, all of which are one. You cannot get healthy humans from unhealthy food coming from a sick environment. Later, I directed a ques-tion to CropLife in front of all of the other delegates, So, if an MRL [Max-imum Residue Level] has an impact on the environment, then that should be of no concern to this Committee? Is that whatCropLifeissaying?CropLife dodged my question and simply referred NHF to its CRD 26.In the end, the Committee advanced most of the substances towards adop-tion, while eliminating or holding back the standards (MRLs) for others. All in all, it was a good week for the pesticide industry, which is accustomed to getting its way at CCPR. At least NHF could shine light on the dubious industry sci-ence and set the stage for the ultimate ban on many of these highly toxic sub-stances.Micro-LivestockNear the end of the third day of the meeting, a curious document was rolled out for the CCPR delegates to consider. The brainchild of an Electronic Work-ing Group (EWG) chaired jointly by the United States and the Netherlands, this innocuously titled document is called Primary Food Commodities of Animal Origin (All Types). Sophie Brouwer ofScreenshot of Codex Documentthe Netherlands proudly led the discus-8 H EALTHF REEDOMN EWS /S UMMER2022NHF_Summer40-2_2022_Linda_08-09-2022.indd 8 8/10/22 11:10 AM'