Etridiazole in food: ingestion safety
Moderate risk(People-specific data is limited; this page draws from human adult context.) Etridiazole — fungicide. See EDC classification.
What is etridiazole?
Also known as: Echlomezole, Ethazol, Echlomezol, Koban.
- CAS number
- 2593-15-9
- Molecular formula
- C5H5Cl3N2OS
- Molecular weight
- 247.5 g/mol
- SMILES
- CCOC1=NC(=NS1)C(Cl)(Cl)Cl
- PubChem CID
- 17432
Risk for people
Moderate riskEtridiazole — fungicide. See EDC classification.
Regulatory consensus
1 regulatory bodyhas classified Etridiazole.
| Agency | Year | Classification | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| EDC Assessment | — | Suspected endocrine disruptor |
Regulators apply different standards of evidence — animal-data weighting, exposure-pattern assumptions, epidemiological power thresholds — which is why two scientific bodies can review the same data and reach different conclusions. The disagreement is the data.
Where you encounter etridiazole
- Agricultural Products — crop treatment, soil application
- Food Chain — residue on produce, water contamination
Safer alternatives
Lower-risk approaches that achieve a similar outcome to Etridiazole:
-
Integrated Pest Management (IPM); Biopesticides; Biological control
Trade-offs: Combines biological, cultural, and targeted chemical controls; reduces overall chemical use 30-70%; requires trained practitioners and monitoring infrastructure; higher management complexity; proven effective at scale in many crop systems.Relative cost: 1.2-2×
Frequently asked questions
What products contain etridiazole?
Etridiazole appears in: crop treatment (Agricultural products); soil application (Agricultural products); residue on produce (Food chain); water contamination (Food chain).
See Etridiazole in the food app
Look up products containing etridiazole, compare to alternatives, and explore the full data record.
Open in food View raw API dataSources (1)
- PubChem (2026) — database
Reference data, not professional advice. Aggregates publicly available regulatory and scientific data; not a substitute for veterinary, medical, legal, or regulatory advice. Why we built ALETHEIA →