July 14 (Reuters) – About 120 premature births a year in New Zealand may be caused by exposure to drinking water contaminated with nitrates from the country’s farming industry, according to a new national study.
• Researchers at Canterbury, Otago and Massey universities found a “significant” association between nitrate-contaminated water and premature births, even at levels far below New Zealand’s legal limit for nitrates in drinking water of 11.3 milligrams per litre. The risk also increased as nitrate concentrations rose, “with stronger associations for more severe outcomes”, it said.
• The issue is especially contentious in New Zealand, where agriculture plays a central role in the economy and nitrate is among the most common contaminants in drinking water.
• The dairy sector is New Zealand’s top export earner and is expected to bring in a record NZ$28.6 billion ($16.56 billion) in revenue in the year to June 2026, according to government statistics. Nitrate pollution is largely attributed to fertiliser use and livestock manure run-off.
• Environmental group Greenpeace said dairy companies such as Fonterra needed to be held responsible. “We need to stop nitrate pollution at the source. That means regulating the intensive dairy industry, and limiting the amount of synthetic nitrogen fertiliser that can be applied to the land,” campaigner Will Appelbe said in a statement.
• Fonterra directed a request for comment to industry body DairyNZ, which said questions about public health and drinking water standards are matters for health and regulatory agencies, which are responsible for assessing the scientific evidence. New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
• The study, set to be published in the peer-reviewed Environmental Research journal in September, analysed more than 735,000 births between 2008 and 2021. Its authors said their research found associations across all categories of premature births and pre-natal nitrate exposure. When the study assumed a causal relationship, it found nitrate exposure could account for 120 premature births a year, or 4% of pregnancies that ended between 20 and 37 weeks.
($1 = 1.7268 New Zealand dollars)
(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney and Lucy Craymer in Wellington; Editing by Lincoln Feast)



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