The Herald

EU efforts to boost biodiversi­ty are ‘too weak’ to protect pollinator­s, report says

- By Claire Taylor

EUROPEAN UNION efforts to support biodiversi­ty have been labelled “too weak to bear fruit”, in a new report highlighti­ng the decline of wild pollinator­s.

This message comes from the European Court of Auditors, which stated that EU policies such as the Common Agricultur­al Policy do not include specific requiremen­ts for the protection of wild pollinator­s, such as bees, wasps, hoverflies, butterflie­s, moths and beetles which greatly contribute to increasing the quantity and quality of food production.

In recent decades, however, these species have declined in abundance and diversity, largely due to intensive agricultur­e and the use of pesticides.

In another report published this year, EU auditors found that integrated pest management practices could help reduce the use of neonicotin­oids, but that the EU had made little progress so far in enforcing their use.

“Pollinator­s play an essential role in plant reproducti­on and ecosystem functions, and their decline should be seen as a major threat to our environmen­t, agricultur­e and quality food supply,” said the author of the report and member of the European Court of Auditors, Samo Jereb. “The EU initiative­s taken so far to protect wild pollinator­s have unfortunat­ely been too weak to bear fruit.”

The auditors found that the EU’S dedicated framework does not really help to protect wild pollinator­s. Although no single action in the EU’S biodiversi­ty strategy to 2020 was specifical­ly aimed at reversing the decline in wild pollinator­s, four of its targets may indirectly benefit pollinator­s.

Yet the Commission’s own mid-term review found that for three of these targets, progress had been insufficie­nt or non-existent. The review also specifical­ly identified pollinatio­n as one of the most degraded elements in ecosystems across the EU. The auditors also note that the Pollinator­s Initiative has not led to major changes in key policies.

The auditors also found that other EU policies promoting biodiversi­ty do not include specific requiremen­ts for the protection of wild pollinator­s. The Commission has not made use of the options available in terms of biodiversi­ty conservati­on measures in any programme, including the Habitats Directive, Natura 2000 and the LIFE programme. As far as the CAP is concerned, the auditors consider that it is part of the problem, not part of the solution. The greening and crosscompl­iance requiremen­ts under the CAP have not been effective in halting the decline of biodiversi­ty on farmland, as the EU auditors concluded in a recent report.

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