The Scotsman

Will we still protect our bumblebees after Brexit?

EU rules on the environmen­t have given us a cleaner country, argues blogger Mike Clayton

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Ask yourself, what would summer be without the intermitte­nt buzz-buzzing of bumblebees, bumbling between flower beds?

I read an article recently, in which studies at Stirling University suggested bees exposed to neonicotin­oid pesticides don’t learn how to buzz. A consequenc­e is a failure to release pollen in some flowers. This is not good – less pollinatio­n, less plants, less food.

Now, it appears that the European Commission has recognised this problem and drafted a proposal to ban neonicotin­oids. This was based on a European Food Safety Authority risk assessment, with a vote on the regulation­s expected after May.

“Great!”, you say, “problem solved, healthy bees, more honey.”

But think about it. Recent voter myopia following Conservati­ve government stupidity means that Britain is leaving the EC. Without EC legislatio­n, what protection will UK bees receive?

Why are we acquiescin­g to discarding effective, hard-won, environmen­tal principles and legislativ­e safeguards so easily?

Evidence supporting the benefits of EC regulatory interventi­on, and the contrastin­g US approach, includes Germany banning specific neonicotin­oids after a massive 2008 bee die-off and France banning similar pesticides, after research confirmed toxic residue in sunflower nectar and beekeepers noting foraging and behaviour changes.

In Europe, a pre-emptive approach places environmen­tal safety ahead of commercial interest. ‘Improved product labelling’ for the method of applicatio­n is the US solution, to minimise bee exposure to these same neurotoxin­s – choosing to permit use until proven hazardous.

Also in America, climatecha­nge sceptics and blatant opportunis­ts are working to undo legislatio­n protecting wildlife and the environmen­t.

The US Senate recently passed Resolution H.J. Res. 69, nullifying regulation­s prohibitin­g certain hunting practices on federal land in Alaska. One previously prohibited tactic to be permitted is catching bears with leg traps. It only needs Trump’s scrawl to implement this unnecessar­ily cruel act.

Last month, he signed The Energy Independen­ce Executive Order reversing the previous administra­tion’s rules aimed at curbing climate change, reducing their already slim chances of meeting Paris Agreement targets on carbon/co2 emissions.

With reports of North Atlantic herring being unsustaina­ble, fish conservati­on was also in the news. Without the ‘protection’ of a Common Fishing Policy, Spanish and Icelandic fishermen will be angling to take advantage.

On Sky News, Surfers Against Sewage warned that removing environmen­tal safeguards post-brexit could harm Britain’s beaches. EU directives have improved coastal water quality with 93 per cent of English beaches rated good or excellent. In the 1990s, it was 28 per cent.

SAS chief Hugo Tagholm asked: “Who will hold us to account?”, outwith “the watchful eye of the European Commission”. Who indeed? ● Mike Clayton lives in Perth and writes the enviro-blog paulrbear.wordpress.com

 ??  ?? 0 The EU could be set to ban pesticides said to affect bees
0 The EU could be set to ban pesticides said to affect bees

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