NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS626
ENT6
WED · 2026-05-13 · 23:01 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0514-76067
News/Typical English roast dinner potentially ‘drenched’ in 102 p…
NSR-2026-0514-76067News Report·EN·Environmental

Typical English roast dinner potentially ‘drenched’ in 102 pesticides, says report

A Greenpeace report released on Thursday reveals that ingredients commonly found in a traditional English roast dinner, such as potatoes, carrots, peas, and strawberries, may have been treated with a cocktail of over 100 pesticides. Data from the Fera pesticide usage survey for 2024 indicated the use of 102 pesticides across seven vegetable and soft fruit categories, including seven banned in the EU due to health and environmental risks.

Damien Gayle Environment correspondentThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-13 · 23:01 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Typical English roast dinner potentially ‘drenched’ in 102 pesticides, says report
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
626words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
6entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

A Greenpeace report released on Thursday reveals that ingredients commonly found in a traditional English roast dinner, such as potatoes, carrots, peas, and strawberries, may have been treated with a cocktail of over 100 pesticides. Data from the Fera pesticide usage survey for 2024 indicated the use of 102 pesticides across seven vegetable and soft fruit categories, including seven banned in the EU due to health and environmental risks. Some of these pesticides are linked to cancer, endocrine disruption, and harm to bees and fish. Greenpeace highlights the extensive use of these chemicals, stating it is devastating wildlife and the natural environment, contributing to declines in birds, butterflies, and hedgehogs. The report argues that this widespread pesticide use, a practice since World War II for efficient production, has detrimental consequences for biodiversity.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 6
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Environmental
Public Health
Tone
Sensational
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

The UK government targets a 10% reduction in pesticide use by 2030, while Greenpeace calls for a 50% cut.

factualGreenpeace report
Confidence
0.90
02

Greenpeace claims the extensive use of pesticides is 'drenching' the countryside and causing 'devastating consequences' for wildlife and ecosystems.

quoteGreenpeace UK
Confidence
0.90
03

Seven pesticides banned in the EU were used on seven vegetable and soft fruit categories, including those found in a roast dinner.

factualGreenpeace report
Confidence
0.90
04

A traditional English roast dinner may contain ingredients treated with over 100 pesticides, according to a Greenpeace report.

factualGreenpeace report
Confidence
0.90
05

Some pesticides found on roast dinner ingredients, like benthiavalicarb on potatoes, are banned in the EU due to potential cancer risks.

factualGreenpeace report
Confidence
0.80
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 626 words
It is a beautiful early summer Sunday afternoon and you have stopped for a pub lunch. A waiter sets down a roast served with carrots, peas, parsnips, potatoes and onion gravy, and then for pudding, strawberries and cream. It feels like the perfect rustic meal to accompany a day in the country.However, a report by Greenpeace, published on Thursday, has found that the ingredients of the traditional Sunday roast have potentially been treated with a cocktail of more than 100 pesticides. Data from the Fera pesticide usage survey for 2024, showed 102 – including seven banned in the EU – were used on seven vegetable and soft fruit categories.Those roast potatoes may have been sprayed with benthiavalicarb, a fungicide banned in the rest of Europe because it causes cancer. They may have also had a sprinkling of metribuzin, a herbicide, banned because its an endocrine disruptor.The carrots may have been treated with the insecticide spirotetramat, whose EU approval has expired and can kill bees and fish. Peas are often treated with the herbicide S-metolachlor, which poses risks to mammals and has been implicated in groundwater contamination.And those strawberries may have been doused with clofentezine, dimethomorph and mepanipyrim, all banned in the EU because they have been identified as endocrine disruptors and may have harmful effects on human and animal hormones.Not only were crops sprayed with a range of pesticides, Greenpeace found, many were dosed over and over. “Our countryside is being drenched in pesticides, with devastating consequences for bees, birds, butterflies, rivers and the soil,” said Nina Schrank, a senior campaigner at Greenpeace-uk" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="30057" data-entity-type="organization">Greenpeace UK.“Fields that once hummed with wildlife are falling silent while agrochemical giants rake in enormous profits and farmers are trapped in a costly cycle of chemical dependency.”The extensive use of pesticides is devastating the natural world, according to Greenpeace’s report. “The signs of nature in decline are everywhere,” it said, pointing out stark declines in birds, butterflies and hedgehogs.Since the end of the second world war, the use of pesticides has become standard practice to eliminate weeds, insects and fungi that get in the way of efficient agricultural production.“However, what we might think of as a weed may also be a wildflower that is shelter or food for a host of creatures,” the report said. “The insects that eat crops are themselves food for other animals, and share the fields with a multitude of species who are not the target, but are nevertheless impacted.“As a result, our dependence on pesticides is a tale of terrible, unintended consequences for entire ecosystems.”The UK government’s pesticides national action plan targets a 10% reduction in pesticide use by 2030. Greenpeace has argued for a 50% cut in use, impact and toxicity by the same deadline. The campaign group called for the UK to realign with EU standards “as a baseline”, ban imports of food grown with unlicensed pesticides and increase the level of organic agriculture to at least 10%.The National Farmers’ Union, which prefers to call pesticides plant protection products, said many of these chemicals were only used by farmers when necessary, were “among the most highly regulated chemical products in the world” and that crop yields could fall by up to 50% without them.A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: “We place strict limits on pesticide residue levels in food, which are set after rigorous risk assessments to make sure levels are safe for consumers. These limits apply to both food produced domestically and imported from other countries.“Our UK national action plan, published last year, sets out how we will support farmers, growers and other land managers to increase their use of sustainable practices to reduce potential harm from pesticides, while controlling pests and pesticide resistance effectively and protecting food security.”
§ 05

Entities

6 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
pesticides
1.00
greenpeace report
0.90
agricultural production
0.80
environmental impact
0.70
wildlife decline
0.70
banned pesticides
0.60
endocrine disruptors
0.50
food contamination
0.50
agrochemistry
0.40
traditional roast dinner
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

Interactive graph