-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
US, European stocks rise as oil prices steady; Asian indexes tumble
-
US Fed warns 'economic uncertainty' weighing on consumers
-
Florida family sues Google after AI chatbot allegedly coached suicide
-
Bayer gets preliminary approval for weedkiller class settlement
-
Russia to free two Hungarian-Ukrainian POWs, Putin says
-
Michelangelo's works hidden in 'secret room', researcher says
-
Ivory Coast cuts cocoa producer price by nearly 60 percent: govt
-
Stocks firm, oil steadies after sell-off on Middle East turmoil
-
Stocks firm, oil dips after sell-off on Middle East turmoil
-
Latest developments in Iran war: Israel plans on 'one, two weeks' of strikes
-
Iran claims 'complete control' of strait: latest in the Mideast war
-
Privacy and attention promises from alternative phones at MWC
-
Adidas shares slump on outlook, Mideast war impact uncertain
-
Weedkiller cancer claims drive Bayer to bigger loss
-
Myanmar drivers scramble for fuel as Mideast war cuts supply
-
AI not hitting European jobs for now: ECB
-
Nepal's Gen Z pins hopes on post-uprising elections
-
Adidas shares slump on downbeat profit outlook
-
Greek court upholds convictions in neo-Nazi party trial
-
Japan eyes remote Pacific island for nuclear waste
-
Israel launches new strikes as Iran squeezes key oil shipping route
-
X suspends revenue sharing for undisclosed AI war videos
-
Patchy Italy disability access 'an insult' ahead of Games
-
Asian stocks tumble further, oil extends gains as inflation fears grow
-
Europe should focus on industrial AI, SAP says
-
Chinese consumers scout lower prices, secondhand goods as spending sputters
-
Formerra Appoints Tom Kelly as Chief Executive Officer
-
Israel says hit Iran nuclear site: Latest developments in Middle East war
-
Judge rules Trump cannot halt New York traffic congestion pricing
-
Iran war threatens Trump fight with inflation
-
Merz seeks early end to Iran war in Trump meeting
-
Germany's Merz meets Trump for talks eclipsed by Iran war
-
Mideast war threatens to spark world energy crisis
-
Iran steps up attacks on Mideast economy in response to US-Israeli strikes
-
UK cuts 2026 growth forecast, flags Iran war risk
-
'Peaky Blinders' stars hit Brum red carpet for movie premiere
-
Drones hit US embassy as vengeful Iran targets Mideast cities
-
Oil extends gains and stocks dive as Middle East war spreads
-
Warming El Nino may return later this year: UN
-
Trump hosts Germany's Merz for talks eclipsed by Mideast war
-
Second-hand phones surf rising green consumer wave
-
AI disinformation turns Nepal polls into 'digital battleground'
-
China's overstretched healthcare looks to AI boom
-
Oil extends gains and stocks drop as Iran conflict spreads
-
Strait of Hormuz impasse squeezes world shipping
-
Oscar-nominated docs take on hot-button US social issues
-
'I couldn't breathe': The dark side of Bolivia's silver boom
-
OMP Unveils Decision-Centric Planning to Accelerate Supply Chain Decision Velocity
-
Middle East war puts shipping firms in tight insurance spot
Bayer gets preliminary approval for weedkiller class settlement
German agrichemical giant Bayer said Wednesday that a US judge had granted preliminary approval for a multi-billion-dollar class settlement proposed by its subsidiary Monsanto over claims the Roundup weedkiller causes blood cancer.
Bayer announced last month that Monsanto had put forward the settlement of up $7.25 billion, seeking to draw a line under years of costly litigation.
Under the proposed agreement, Monsanto would make a series of declining annual payments for up to 21 years.
Bayer has spent billions of dollars settling thousands of cases linked to Roundup since it acquired the weedkiller's producer, the US agrichemical group Monsanto, in 2018.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer considers glyphosate, one of Roundup's ingredients, a probable human carcinogen, but Bayer says scientific studies and regulatory approvals show the weedkiller is safe.
Announcing the latest development Wednesday, Bayer said a judge in Missouri had granted preliminary approval for the settlement.
"This is the first major step in putting this settlement into effect, and we remain confident that the long-term and well-financed class settlement plan, which is supported by leading plaintiffs' law firms, warrants final approval by the court," said a statement from the Leverkusen-based group.
People potentially covered by the settlement will now be notified and will have 90 days to opt out or file objections, Bayer said.
The court will then decide whether to grant final approval of the settlement, which will be subject to potential appeals.
- 'Right approach' -
Getting the settlement through would mark a milestone for Bayer, which otherwise faces a potentially still long and expensive legal road. About 67,000 Roundup cases are still outstanding.
It said in February it had set aside 11.8 billion euros to deal with litigation as of September 2025, up from 7.8 billion euros previously.
Bayer said then that it expected litigation payouts of about five billion euros for 2026 "on a first estimate". The settlements did not contain or imply any admission of liability or wrongdoing, the group said.
The group earlier Wednesday announced it made a loss of 3.62 billion euros ($4.20 billion) in 2025 after it booked extra charges related to weedkiller claims.
The loss was bigger than the 2.55 billion euros the firm lost in 2024.
The settlement was necessary despite the Supreme Court agreeing to hear Bayer's appeal against damages to a Missouri man who claims Roundup caused his cancer, company boss Bill Anderson said, warning that the firm otherwise faced being bogged down in lawsuits.
"This settlement agreement is the right approach at the right time," he said.
"The company needs to move on. This has been a huge drag on Bayer for almost a decade."
A.Mykhailo--CPN