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EWG reveals its Dirty Dozen; AFF challenges validity of list

More than 99 percent of produce samples tested by the USDA are below the legal limits for pesticide residues

EWG reveals its Dirty Dozen; AFF challenges validity of list

The Environmental Working Group has released it’s 2026 shoppers guide, listing the 12 fruits and vegetables with the most pesticide residues.

The group uses a list of test results from an annual report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture as the basis for its Dirty Dozen and Clean 15. 

Although it acknowledges that all of the fruits and vegetables on its Dirty Dozen list are well below the allowable limits for pesticide residue, the group contends that any pesticide residue is of danger to human health. 

In addition to the Dirty Dozen, the environmental group creates a Clean 15 list for its annual shoppers guide. Along with the list, the group suggests that consumers buy organic produce. However, organic fruits and vegetables are allowed to be produced using certain chemical pesticides, as well as manure, by the USDA’s organic program.

The Alliance for Food and Farming challenges the validity of the environmental group’s shoppers’ guide.

“The Environmental Working Group’s (EWG) ‘Dirty Dozen’ report once again villainizes safe, healthy, and affordable fruits and vegetables by misrepresenting USDA pesticide data,” according to the food and farming group.

“In its usual approach, EWG overstates the risk of consumer pesticide exposure by leaving out a key detail: more than 99 percent of the commodities sampled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in its annual Pesticide Data Program (PDP) report  — the source material for the EWG report — have residues well below the stringent safety standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

According to the Alliance for Food and Farming, USDA's latest report demonstrates that the vast majority of the commodities sampled had residues well below the established EPA safety standards, and more than 42 percent had no detectable residues.

EWG’s Dirty Dozen

1.Spinach

2.Kale and collard and mustard greens

3. Strawberries

4. Grapes

5. Nectarines

6. Peaches

7. Cherries

8. Apples

9. Blackberries

10. Pears

11. Potatoes

12.Blueberries

EWG’s Clean Fifteen

  1. Pineapple
  2. Sweet corn

3. Avocados

4. Papayas

5. Onions

6. Sweet peas

7. Asparagus

8. Cabbage

9. Cauliflower

10. Watermelon

11. Mangoes

12. Bananas

13. Carrots

14. Mushrooms

15. Kiwi

Coral Beach

Coral Beach

Managing Editor Coral Beach is a print journalist with more than 35 years experience as a reporter and editor for daily newspapers, trade publications and freelance clients including the Kansas City Star and Independence Examiner.

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