Peel those apples: New study confirms washing doesn’t remove pesticide residues
A new scientific report lends weight to consumer concerns about pesticide residues on food, presenting fresh evidence that washing fruit before eating it does not remove various toxic chemicals commonly used in agriculture.
The paper, authored by Chinese researchers and published Wednesday in the American Chemical Society’s journal Nano Letters, comes amid ongoing debate over the extent of pesticide contamination of food, and the potential health risks associated with a steady diet that includes residues of weed killing chemicals, insecticides and other farm chemicals.
In May, Consumer Reports said it had determined that 20% of 59 different fruit and vegetable categories carried pesticide residues at levels that posed “significant risks” to consumers, based on an analysis of data gathered by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).
The central point of the new paper is primarily to share the technical details of a process the authors developed allowing for enhanced trace detection of pesticides in foods. But the underlying finding about the ineffectiveness of washing fruit is important for consumers who may be relying on food safety practices that are insufficient, the authors said.
Traditional “fruit-cleaning operations cannot wholly remove pesticides,” the paper states.
When using the technique to examine an apple, for instance, the researchers said the “imaging results prove that the pesticides penetrate the peel layer into the pulp layer.”
Using the technology they developed, the authors said they found the pesticide contamination diminished when the apple peel was removed along with some of the pulp layer.
“This study, situated within the expansive realm of food safety, endeavors to furnish health guidance to consumers,” said Dongdong Ye, a professor with the School of Materials and Chemistry at Anhui Agricultural University and an author of the paper. “Rather than fostering undue apprehension, the research posits that peeling can effectively eliminate nearly all pesticide residues, contrasted with the frequently recommended practice of washing.”
Consumer Reports senior scientist Michael Hansen said the new technique could be helpful to academics and government scientists in better understanding pesticide persistence in foods and how to better protect consumers.
“This is actually useful for understanding how these pesticides move in,” Hansen said. “This is more science showing that, yes, there are concerns. Don’t just think that washing is going to help you.”
The health risks posed by pesticides have been documented in several studies, but most of those deal with occupational exposure, rather than dietary. The USDA, as well as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), maintain that pesticide residues in foods are not generally a concern for health if they fall within legal limits.
Both agencies have been tracking levels of pesticide residues in foods for decades, reporting their findings annually.
In the most recent USDA pesticide data program report, the agency said that 99% of foods tested had residues that fell within legal limits and thus did not “pose risk to consumers’ health and are safe.”
Still, more than 72% of the over 10,000 food samples did carry detectable pesticide residues, the USDA reported.
(Photo by Juan Ellul on Unsplash.)
(A version of this story was co-published by The Guardian.)