US EPA Blocks 1.6 Million Pounds of Illegal Pesticides from China

US EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin told lawmakers the agency has blocked over 1.6 million pounds of illegal pesticide imports since early 2025. Zeldin highlighted unauthorized chemicals entering the US market, including shipments linked to China with "Chinese letters" on packaging. Authorities have charged 65 criminal defendants for smuggling and transnational organized criminal conduct. The EPA has also stopped more than 500 shipments of non-compliant products, with increased inspections and coordination across agencies.

Key Points: US EPA Blocks 1.6M lbs China-Linked Pesticide Imports

  • EPA blocked over 1.6 million pounds of illegal pesticide imports since early 2025
  • 65 criminal defendants charged for smuggling and transnational organized crime
  • Over 500 non-compliant shipments stopped at US borders
  • EPA chief highlights enforcement gaps and harm to US farmers
2 min read

US flags China-linked illegal pesticide influx

EPA chief Lee Zeldin says agency blocked 1.6 million pounds of illegal pesticide imports, including China-linked shipments, charging 65 defendants since early 2025.

"We have pesticides that come in from out of the country... we have pesticides that get dumped here from China. - EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin"

Washington, April 28

US regulators have stepped up efforts to block illegal pesticide imports, including shipments linked to China, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency told lawmakers.

EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the agency has made import enforcement a priority as it confronts what he described as unauthorised chemicals entering the US market.

"We have pesticides that come in from out of the country... we have pesticides that get dumped here from China," Zeldin told a congressional hearing.

He said visits to farms revealed products with "Chinese letters" on packaging, calling it "eye opening" to see how widespread foreign-linked inputs can be.

Zeldin drew a distinction between legally imported pesticides that go through US registration and products that are smuggled or sold outside regulatory controls.

"It's another thing when you're illegally dumping... pesticides into our country," he said.

The EPA has blocked "over 1.6 million pounds of illegal pesticides imports" and stopped more than 500 shipments of non-compliant products since early 2025, Zeldin said.

He added that authorities have "charged 65 criminal defendants for illegal smuggling and transnational organised criminal conduct."

The comments came during a hearing on the Trump administration's proposed EPA budget, where lawmakers debated funding cuts and regulatory priorities.

While most of the discussion focused on domestic policy, the pesticide issue highlighted concerns about foreign supply chains and enforcement gaps.

Zeldin said illegal imports hurt US farmers and undermine safety standards. He said the agency's Office of Enforcement and Compliance has increased inspections and coordination with other agencies.

"EPA is prepared to deliver even more results in fiscal year 27," he said.

Lawmakers did not directly challenge the China-related remarks during the exchange. But broader concerns about chemical safety and oversight surfaced repeatedly, including questions about pesticide reviews and public health risks.

The United States regulates pesticides through a federal approval process that requires testing and safety review. Products that do not meet those standards are barred from sale. Enforcement, however, can be difficult when shipments move through complex international supply chains.

China is one of the world's largest producers of pesticides. US officials have raised concerns in the past about counterfeit or non-compliant products entering domestic markets, often through indirect channels.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Jacob K
This is concerning for global agriculture. If unregulated pesticides are entering the US, they could easily end up in Indian markets too through trade channels. We saw similar issues with spurious pesticides in Punjab a few years ago. The EPA's action is commendable, but this needs a coordinated international response. China's pesticide industry is massive, and if even 1% is illegal, that's still a huge volume.
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Amita V
As an Indian farmer's daughter, I find this scary. We already struggle with fake fertilizers and pesticides in our villages. If the US, with all its advanced monitoring, can't stop illegal imports, what hope do we have? 😓 The fact that 500 shipments were caught shows how widespread this is. But let's not demonize all Chinese products - many Indian farmers rely on affordable Chinese pesticides and agrochemicals.
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Thomas Y
Fair criticism: the EPA administrator's "Chinese letters" comment was loaded with bias. Plenty of legitimate Chinese pesticide companies follow international standards. But I agree illegal dumping hurts everyone - US farmers, Indian farmers, and the environment. What India can learn here is the need for stronger port inspections. Our customs at Mundra and JNPT could take a leaf from EPA's enforcement playbook.
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Ravi K
Another round of China-bashing from Washington. Conveniently, they ignore that US companies also outsource production to China and then cry about quality control. Meanwhile, our Indian farmers are caught between cheap Chinese products and expensive branded alternatives. The real solution is better testing labs at both ends. Kudos to EPA for arresting 65 people though - that shows serious intent.
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