Both aldrin and dieldrin have been banned in most developed countries, but aldrin is still used as a termiticide in Malaysia, Thailand, Venezuela and parts of Africa. In Canada, their sale was restricted in the mid-1970s, with the last registered use of the compounds in Canada being withdrawn in 1984. The
International Programme on Chemical Safety quotes the World Health Organization as stating dieldrin is prohibited for use in agriculture in, among others, Brazil, Ecuador, Finland, the German Democratic Republic, Singapore, Sweden, Yugoslavia, and the USSR. The European Community legislation prohibits the marketing of phytopharmaceutical products containing dieldrin. In Argentina, Canada, Chile, the Federal Republic of Germany, Hungary, and the US, its use is prohibited, with some exceptions. The use of dieldrin is restricted in India, Mauritius, Togo, and the United Kingdom. Its use in industry is prohibited in Switzerland and its manufacture and use in Japan is under government control. In Finland, the only accepted use for dieldrin is as a
termiticide in one glue mixture for exported plywood. India requires registration and licences for all importation, manufacture, sale, or storage. Momentum against organochlorine and similar molecules continued to grow internationally, leading to negotiations that matured as the
Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants(POPs). POPs are defined as hazardous and environmentally persistent substances which can be transported between countries by the Earth's oceans and atmosphere. Most POPs (including dieldrin) bioaccumulate in the fatty tissues of humans and other animals. The Stockholm Convention banned twelve POPs, nicknamed "the dirty dozen". These include
aldicarb,
toxaphene,
chlordane and
heptachlor,
chlordimeform,
chlorobenzilate,
DBCP, DDT, "
drins" (aldrin, dieldrin and endrin), EDB, HCH and
lindane,
paraquat,
parathion and
methylparathion,
pentachlorophenol, and
2,4,5-T. This took force on 17 May 2004. Australia ratified the Convention only three days later and became a party to it in August that year. Legislation in Australia on the import, use and disposal of dieldrin and other organochlorines has been extensive and covers mainly environmental and potential health impacts on the population. ==Australia==