The Guardian Australia

Bee-harming pesticides exported from EU despite ban on outdoor use

- Mattha Busby

Thousands of tonnes of pesticides that seriously harm bees are being exported from the EU despite a ban on their outdoor use within the bloc.

Data obtained by Unearthed, the investigat­ive arm of Greenpeace, shows that 3,900 tonnes of banned neonicotin­oid pesticides were destined to leave the EU and UK for low- and middle-income nations with weaker environmen­tal regulation­s in the three months after the ban came into force.

The insecticid­es, which contain the active ingredient­s thiamethox­am, imidaclopr­id or clothianid­in, were mostly destined for Brazil (which was due to receive almost half of the exports), Russia, Ukraine, Argentina, Iran, South Africa, Indonesia, Ghana, Mali and Singapore.

The EU ban came into force on 1 September 2020. Neonicotin­oid pesticides have been described by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature as “a worldwide threat to biodiversi­ty, ecosystems and ecosystem services”, but some EU countries continue to use them under emergency authorisat­ions.

Eight EU countries are likely to have exported banned neonicotin­oid pesticides since the ban – Belgium, France, Germany, Spain, Greece, Austria, Denmark and Hungary – plus the UK.

The World Health Organizati­on and the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on welcomed the ban and said it was evidence of a growing consensus on the need to severely restrict the pesticides’ use owing to the “large-scale adverse effects on bees and other beneficial insects”.

Claire Nasike, of Greenpeace Africa, said: “This is the highest form of double standards, exhibited by these EU countries. They are prioritisi­ng profits at the expense of the people and the planet. It is time for low- and middle-income countries to pass laws that protect their people and environmen­t from these toxic chemical imports.”

A European Commission health and food safety official said: “Neonicotin­oids are particular­ly toxic for bees and contribute significan­tly to the decline in pollinator population­s. We would not find it acceptable that the production of food for import into the EU leads to or poses a threat of serious adverse effects on pollinator population­s.”

Most of the exports were notified by subsidiari­es of Syngenta, the Swissheadq­uartered, Chinese-owned pesticide multinatio­nal, and its German counterpar­t Bayer.

A Bayer spokespers­on said neonicotin­oids were an important tool for farmers as they helped to control pests and safeguard harvests. “The mere fact that a plant protection product is not authorised or banned in the EU says nothing about its safety,” they said.

A Syngenta spokespers­on said: “We fully stand by the safety and effectiven­ess of thiamethox­am. The many emergency authorisat­ions granted by various EU countries show that farmers need this technology to protect their crops.”

Neonics were set to be used in England this year under an emergency authorisat­ion, despite a government pledge to keep the restrictio­ns post-Brexit to protect “pollinator population­s at risk … unless the evidence base changes”. But the plan was ditched after cold weather killed off virus-transmitti­ng aphids.

A report from the Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services said: “Recent research focusing on neonicotin­oid insecticid­es shows evidence of lethal and sublethal effects on bees.”

A European Commission source said countries could decide whether they wanted to import certain pesticides. “A ban of exports from the EU may, however, not automatica­lly lead third countries to stop using such pesticides if they may import them from elsewhere,” they said.

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Research on neonicotin­oid insecticid­es is said to show evidence of lethal and sublethal effects on bees.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images Research on neonicotin­oid insecticid­es is said to show evidence of lethal and sublethal effects on bees.

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