The Borneo Post

Germany moots tougher law on insect protection

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Germany plans an insect protection law to slash use of pesticides and pump tens of millions of dollars into research, a minister said Sunday, as global concern grows over mankind’s impact on the crucial invertebra­tes.

“We human beings need insects, they deserve to be protected with their own law,” Environmen­t Minister Svenja Schulze told weekly Bild am Sonntag.

Her “action plan for protecting insects”, seen by news agency DPA, would provide annual funding of 100 million euros (US$113 million) for the cause, including 25 million euros for research.

Germany would also stop covering new land with concrete for roads or home constructi­on until 2050, and limit light emissions at night to avoid disorienti­ng the six-legged creatures.

The federal government would set rules for “environmen­tally and naturally bearable applicatio­n of pesticides and significan­t reduction of their input and that of other harmful substances into insect habitats,” according to the document.

Schulze’s scheme would include a ban by 2023 for hotly- debated herbicide glyphosate – overtaking neighbour France, which has yet to set a firm date.

But the Social Democratic Party ( SPD) minister could face difficulty pushing her law past members of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU).

The senior coalition partner in Berlin holds the critical agricultur­e ministry and is traditiona­lly closer to farmers.

“We wouldn’t only be protecting stag beetles and bumblebees, but above all ourselves” by preserving insects, Schulze said.

Campaigner­s worldwide have highlighte­d the risks of declining insect numbers, noting the arthropods are vital for pollenatin­g plants – including food crops – and as food sources for larger animals like birds.

Last week, a record 1.75 million people in prosperous south German state Bavaria signed a petition for a referendum to “save the bees”, calling for more organic farming and green spaces and increased protection from agricultur­al chemicals.

The referendum campaign was opposed by the powerful regional farmers’ associatio­n, which warned of potential financial costs to the industry and urged the population to “stop bashing farmers”. — AFP

 ??  ?? A file photo of Bolsonaro, his son Flavio and Bebianno attend a news conference in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — Reuters photo
A file photo of Bolsonaro, his son Flavio and Bebianno attend a news conference in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — Reuters photo

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