The Daily Telegraph

EU states use banned pesticides once a fortnight, says Greenpeace

- By Emma Gatten environmen­t editor

EUROPEAN government­s have authorised the use of banned pesticides at an average rate of once every two weeks since they were outlawed in 2018, according to analysis by Greenpeace.

Neonicotin­oids, the world’s most widely used pesticides, were banned by the EU after they were linked to the decline of bees and other pollinator­s.

But Government­s may issue shortterm emergency exemptions for “special or exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” to save a crop, and Greenpeace says these have been granted by government­s 67 times in two years, for what they say is actually just routine control of pests.

One authorisat­ion was granted by

Denmark to German pesticide producer Bayer to get rid of garden chafers, a type of beetle, because of their economic impact on golf courses.

The Danish environmen­t ministry said the authorisat­ion was justified because golf courses are unattracti­ve to bees and it was therefore low risk.

“These ‘emergency authorisat­ions’ are supposed to be granted only under exceptiona­l circumstan­ces but, at the rate in which they’re being dished out, it would seem that for some countries exception has become the rule,” Doug Parr, the chief scientist at Greenpeace UK, said. “On average, permission has been granted for the use of these deadly pesticides somewhere across Europe every other week.”

Bayer told Greenpeace that continued use of exemptions was evidence that farmers had no other options. The company has had six authorisat­ions granted in its own name.

The National Farmers Union in the UK has joined with Bayer in a legal challenge to the ban, arguing that the EU did not do a sufficient cost-benefit analysis.

Neonicotin­oids have also been linked to declines in migratory songbirds and to the collapse of aquatic ecosystems. Last year, scientists blamed them for wiping out plankton and fish in a Japanese lake in the 1990s.

Sixteen EU member states have issued at least one authorisat­ion since April 2018, Greenpeace found. Belgium issuing the most, with 14, followed by Romania, with 10 authorisat­ions, and Poland with nine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom