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Natural Resources Defense Council » Grade: F
Despite its self-characterization as “The Earth’s
Best Defense,” the Natural Resources Defense Council
(NRDC) is anything but a friend to animals. In fact, the NRDC
has established itself as one of the most outspoken and unrelenting
advocates for animal testing in the U.S.
In May 1999, the NRDC coordinated a joint
letter with U.S. environmental and children’s health
organizations, calling on the EPA to require every pesticide
(of which there are thousands) to be tested on animals for
“developmental neurotoxicity” (DNT). This massive
animal-poisoning test—which kills more than 1,300 animals
every time it is performed—involves force-feeding a
pesticide chemical to female rats throughout their pregnancy
and while they nurse their newborn pups. The pups are then
subjected to a series of crude behavioral tests and then are
killed so that their brains can be examined. The DNT study
has been heavily criticized on both ethical and scientific
grounds. Even the EPA’s own Scientific Advisory Panel
concluded that “the exposure of rat fetus/pup was not
shown to be equivalent to human fetus/infant during equivalent
stages of brain development” and that “the current
form of the DNT guideline is not a sensitive indicator of
toxicity to the offspring.” See PETA’s DNT factsheet
for more information about the scientific shortcomings of
DNT studies.
The NRDC was also one of the main proponents of a 1996 law
that required the EPA to “develop a screening program,
using appropriate validated test systems ... to determine
whether certain substances may have an effect in humans
that is similar to an effect produced by a naturally occurring
estrogen ....” Then, as a member of the EPA’s
Endocrine Disruptor Screening and Testing Advisory Committee,
the NRDC supported expanding the “Endocrine
Disruptor Screening Program” (EDSP) to examine chemical
effects on multiple hormone types (instead of just
estrogen) and on multiple species (instead of just
humans). This effectively quadrupled the size and scope of
the EDSP—as well as the animal body count that this
program will generate—and caused the EPA to fall several
years behind schedule in implementing the EDSP.
Frustrated by these delays (which it helped to cause), the
NRDC sued the EPA in an attempt to force the agency to begin
the testing process sooner—without properly validating
the test that would be used. PETA intervened in the NRDC’s
lawsuit in an attempt to promote the use of promising non-animal
test methods that were ignored or overlooked when the EDSP
was being designed. Not only did the NRDC fail to support
our efforts, it went so far as to attempt to have our lawsuit
dismissed, characterizing PETA’s promotion of proper
(and legally required) test-method validation as “repeated
demands ... for additional, time-consuming procedural and
substantive roadblocks.”
PETA has made repeated attempts to find common ground with
the NRDC and to convince the organization to curb its enthusiastic
promotion of animal testing. We wrote to the NRDC in March
2001, asking for its position on animal testing and its
endorsement of a statement calling on the EPA to increase
its funding and use of non-animal test methods and endorsing
the use of only new test methods that have been rigorously
assessed by the Interagency Coordinating Committee for the
Validation of Alternative Methods and found to be scientifically
valid.
We have yet to receive a written response from the NRDC to
our March 2001 letter. In a further good-faith attempt to
establish some common ground, PETA wrote to the NRDC in August
2002, inviting its endorsement of an entirely non-animal strategy
for testing chemicals for endocrine disrupting effects as
an alternative to the massive animal testing program under
development by the EPA. We did receive a response to that
letter. The NRDC declined to support PETA’s non-animal
testing strategy, while at the same time, belittling our ethical
concerns regarding the EDSP.
In January 2004, the NRDC provided
comments to the U.S. National Toxicology Program (NTP)
on a variety of issues. A recurring theme in the NRDC’s
comments is the “NTP rodent bioassay"—a $2
million study in which groups of at least 400 rats and 400
mice are dosed with a test chemical for their entire lifespan
(2 years on average) to see if they develop cancer. It is
striking to note that even though the NRDC says that it supports
the “appropriate integration of data from ... in
vitro toxicity test methods,” it “strongly
objects ... if a goal is to develop an alternative approach
to the rodent bioassay.” The NRDC goes on to suggest
that its support for in vitro methods is tied primarily
to their use in “trans-species extrapolations of toxic
or carcinogenic effects.” In other words, the NRDC appears
to support in vitro methods only as a means of better
interpreting the results of animal tests. The NRDC goes on
to criticize evidence from human population studies, while
explicitly calling for more chemicals to be tested on animals
in the NTP bioassay (e.g., “We encourage the NTP to
expand this trusted methodology, to handle an increased number
of chemicals annually.”).
PETA also asked the NRDC for its support of our "Give the Animals 5" campaign to replace five animal tests with non-animal methods that have been scientifically validated and/or accepted by government regulators in other countries. In its response, the NRDC states: “While we believe
that all of these tests have great potential to reduce or
replace animal testing, and we fervently hope they will soon
be ready to replace animal tests, at this time we understand
that they are not fully validated, and are therefore not yet
eligible to replace animal testing at this time.” The
NRDC goes on to state that the reason for its unwillingness
to support a single one of the non-animal test methods that
PETA has identified is that the validation of these methods
did not occur in the U.S. In other words, the NRDC seems to
think that even if a test undergoes successful scientific
validation in another country—a process that can take
several years and cost millions of dollars—its validity
needs to be re-assessed in the U.S. before it can
be used in regulatory decision-making. Click
here to read PETA's most recent letter to the NRDC.
Most recently, on September 20, 2007, the Natural Resources Defense Council—along with the Sierra Club and other organizations—petitioned the EPA to require manufacturers to conduct short-term and long-term toxicity experiments on animals for air fresheners. These experiments would have required confining animals to gas chambers; squeezing them into inhalation tubes; or restraining them with breathing apparatuses over their mouths, forcing them to breathe in air fresheners and their ingredients. Fortunately, the EPA agreed with PETA's formal comments and denied the petition, sparing thousands of animals!
As Dr. Joshua Lederberg, Nobel laureate in medicine, wrote
in 1981: “It is simply not possible with all the animals
in the world to go through chemicals in the blind way we have
at the present time, and reach credible conclusions about
the hazards to human health.” Now, more than 20 years
later, millions of animals are still dying in agonizing chemical-poisoning
tests at the behest of groups like the NRDC, yet we are no
closer to getting dangerous chemicals out of our environment.
What You Can Do
Please send polite letters urging the NRDC to turn its back
on animal-testing. Click
here for points that you can include in your letter.
Frances Beinecke, Executive Director
Natural Resources Defense Council
40 W. 20th St.
New York, NY 10011
212-727-1773 (fax)
fbeinecke@nrdc.org
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