Oman Daily Observer

France bans bee-killing pesticides

- FRED TANNEAU

Aban on five neonicotin­oid pesticides enters into force in France on Saturday, placing the country at the forefront of a campaign against chemicals blamed for decimating critical population­s of croppollin­ating bees. The move has been hailed by beekeepers and environmen­tal activists, but lamented by cereal and sugar beet farmers who claim there are no effective alternativ­es for protecting their valuable crops against insects.

With its ban, France has gone further than the European Union, which voted to outlaw the use of three neonicotin­oids — clothianid­in, imidaclopr­id and thiamethox­am — in crop fields.

Heavily agricultur­e-reliant France banned these three neonicotin­oids plus thiaclopri­d and acetamipri­d, not only outdoors but in greenhouse­s too. These are the only five neonicotin­oid pesticides hitherto authorised for use in Europe.

Introduced in the mid-1990s, labsynthes­ised neonicotin­oids are based on the chemical structure of nicotine, and attack the central nervous system of insects. They were meant to be a less harmful substitute to older pesticides, and are now the most widely-used to treat flowering crops, including fruit trees, beets, wheat, canola, and vineyards.

In recent years, bees started dying off from “colony collapse disorder,” a mysterious scourge blamed partly on pesticides along with mites, viruses, and fungi, or some combinatio­n of these.

Scientific studies have since shown that neonicotin­oids harm bee reproducti­on and foraging by diminishin­g sperm quality and scrambling the insects’ memory and navigation functions. Exposure also lowers their resistance to disease.

Some research has suggested that — like nicotine for humans — neonicotin­oids hold an addictive attraction for bees, which shunned healthy food for pesticidel­aced treats in lab tests.

The UN has warned that nearly half of insect pollinator­s, particular­ly bees and butterflie­s, risk global extinction. This is particular­ly concerning in the context of a 2016 study which found that about 1.4 billion jobs and three-quarters of all crops depend on pollinator­s, mainly bees, which provide free plant fertilisat­ion services worth billions of dollars.

Some French farmers are angry over the ban, however, and say there is not enough evidence that neonicotin­oids are responsibl­e for bee decline.

“A large number (of agricultur­al producers) find themselves at a dramatic technical dead-end,” a collection of farmers’ bodies said in a joint statement calling for exemptions in sectors “where there are no alternativ­es, or insufficie­nt ones” to neonicotin­oids.

The ban, the groups claimed, “will exacerbate unfair competitio­n with European and non-european producers” still allowed to use the pesticides. A report by France’s ANSES public health agency said in May there were “sufficient­ly effective, and operationa­l” alternativ­es to the majority of neonicotin­oids used in France.

Some believe the measures do not go far enough. “We should not limit ourselves to this family” of pesticides, argued Francois Veillerett­e of environmen­tal lobby group Generation­s Futures. “Many others need banning too.”

Many are concerned that neonicotin­oids will continue to be authorised for use in non-agricultur­al pest control, such as in flea collars for pet cats and dogs, or in household fly traps. The ANSES said in a report in February these products pose no risk to human health, provided they are used as specified.

The ban pitted French Agricultur­e Minister Stephane Travert, who lobbied for an easing, against Environmen­t Minister Nicolas Hulot who refused to back down. Hulot resigned on Tuesday, saying he felt “all alone” in the government on environmen­tal issues.

Earlier this month, Canada announced plans to phase out clothianid­in and thiamethox­am.

The French ban allows for case-by-case exemptions on the use of acetamipri­d until July 1, 2020.

The move has been hailed by beekeepers and environmen­tal activists, but lamented by cereal and sugar beet farmers who claim there are no effective alternativ­es for protecting their valuable crops against insects

 ?? — AFP FILE PHOTO ?? French beekeeper Thomas Le Glatin inspects his beehive frames in Ploerdut, western France.
— AFP FILE PHOTO French beekeeper Thomas Le Glatin inspects his beehive frames in Ploerdut, western France.

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