Important Produce Safety Takeaways from USDA PDP Report
11/11/2024
Last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released its annual Pesticide Data Program report to little fanfare or attention. We’ve said repeatedly for years that consumers deserve to know more about this annual report that consistently shows how very low residues are, if present at all, and verifies the safety of our fruits and vegetables. And, yet no consumer media outlets covered the release.
So what are consumers missing? Here are a few key takeaways from the 231-page report:
- USDA prioritizes testing foods that are most commonly consumed by infants and children.
- Because PDP data are used for risk assessments, PDP laboratory methods are geared to detect very low levels of pesticide residues, even when those levels are well below the tolerances (safety levels) established by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
- Over 99% of the foods sampled by USDA were well below safety limits set by the EPA with 40% having no detectable residues at all.
- In 2023, 9,832 samples were taken by the USDA program. Fresh and processed fruits and vegetables accounted for 98.2% of the samples. In total, USDA program personal conducted more than 2.8 million pesticide analyses.
- The publicly available PDP database is among the most comprehensive sources for pesticide residues in foods in the world.
The 2.8 million analyses illustrate how thorough the USDA program is. And yet….every spring we must suffer through other groups’ manipulation of this data which somehow turns the very positive results from USDA into something negative and includes erroneous claims about produce safety. And, equally disturbing, media outlets that routinely ignore the USDA PDP report will cover the release of these outside groups’ manipulated data instead.
Each year, the Alliance for Food and Farming (AFF) works to provide the USDA PDP results to consumers and media along with other science-based produce safety information. That work is paying off with fewer and fewer media outlets covering the inaccurate safety claims about fruits and vegetables released by outside groups every spring.
We also share the USDA results with our network of nutritionists who are influencers on mainstream and social media and have a megaphone to consumers everywhere to reassure them about the safety of produce and the importance of eating more.
In today’s environment, misinformation about food safety and nutrition is prevalent making it sometimes challenging to find credible information. This is why the AFF partners with farmers, registered dietitians and scientists from academia to provide consumers with fact-based content to help them choose what produce is affordable and accessible to them. And, when the government releases a comprehensive and important report about produce safety, we do our best to raise consumer awareness about it. Especially when others ignore it.
Read, learn, choose but eat more organic and conventional fruits and vegetables for better health and a longer life. Learn more about the safety of all produce at safefruitsandveggies.com and @safeproduce.
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