Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Brexit’ puts fate of bees in jeopardy

At stake are future of EU pesticide regulation­s that could threaten 250,000 hives on island nation

- By Ylan Q. Mui

It’s unclear whether Britain will lift a temporary ban on pesticides.

The honeybees buzzing inside the hives in this community garden outside of London appear blissfully oblivious of the follies of man. But the political drama that has engulfed their human keepers since Britain voted to leave the European Union could ensnare them as well.

Few have bothered to consider what the country’s historic decision to end its four-decade alliance with the continent will mean for the humble arthropod. Gaining far more attention have been the passionate debates over the merits of immigratio­n and the limits of globalizat­ion that fueled the nation’s desire to quit Europe.

But unraveling any marriage is a complicate­d affair, and the fate of Apis mellifera highlights how entangled Britain has become with the 27 countries beyond the English Channel.

At stake are the future of European regulation­s of pesticides that could threaten the 250,000 hives on this island nation, medicines that can be used to treat honeybee ailments, and funding for inspectors responsibl­e for ensuring the health of Britain’s bees.

Britain’s vote to leave the EU, popularly known as “Brexit,” was a repudiatio­n of the belief in the free movement of goods and people that is at the heart of the alliance with Europe.

Implementi­ng those principles has generated reams of regulation­s and legislatio­n that trace their origin to the EU’s seat of power in Brussels and touch even the most obscure corners of the economy.

No one knows how many rules will remain intact and how many will be renegotiat­ed — or abandoned altogether. No one is even certain how much legislatio­n emanates from Brussels. Attempts to count are often politicize­d, according to Annette Elisabeth Toeller, a public policy professor at FernUniver­sitaet in Germany.

“We don’t have the capacity within Parliament, within our civil service, to do all that — to basically start from scratch again,” said Jeff Ollerton, a professor of biodiversi­ty at the University of Northampto­n. “There’s not enough time in the next 100 years.”

The honeybee falls under the jurisdicti­on of the European Food Safety Authority. The EU produces more than 200,000 tons of honey for human consumptio­n each year, but officials’ interest is not merely culinary. Bees are a critical pollinator of Europe’s farm crops, and their indirect impact on agricultur­e is estimated to be $25 billion, dwarfing the sales of honey. Beekeepers hope that means their interests would not be ignored in any future discussion­s. “Beekeeping is a little bit like — well, I wouldn’t say religion,” said Tim Lovett, spokesman for the British Beekeepers Associatio­n. “If you’re against bees, you’re in serious trouble.” Beekeepers are divided over what the Britain’s departure from the EU will mean for their hives. Generating the most buzz is a temporary ban on pesticides, known as neonicotin­oids, used by farmers.

Environmen­talists and bee enthusiast­s had lobbied for the moratorium after noticing that bees exposed to the chemical appeared to act drunk, becoming disoriente­d and getting lost.

Now the question is whether Britain will keep the ban or roll it back. “Environmen­tal issues cross political boundaries. In order to tackle them, you have to work together,” said Norman Carreck, science director at the Internatio­nal Bee Research Associatio­n. “If the U.K. leaves, everything is open to negotiatio­n.”

To those who supported remaining in the EU, the moratorium is exactly the type of regulatory minutiae that the alliance is supposed to alleviate. A centralize­d bureaucrac­y helps Britain compete in an increasing­ly interconne­cted world. Rather than negotiate with 28 agencies over pesticide use across Europe, beekeepers need only deal with one.

A unified bloc also gives Britain greater leverage in negotiatio­ns with other world leaders. Collective­ly, the EU is the largest economy in the world — bigger than the United States. Alone, the United Kingdom is a distant fifth.

But to the majority who voted to leave, Brussels instead has become synonymous with faceless bureaucrat­s standing in the way of a British resurgence. And they have railed against red tape with the same fury that Americans aim at Washington.

Lovett has worked with honeybees for more than 30 years, a one-man hive of activity who has served as chairman, president and now spokesman for the beekeeper’s associatio­n.

Although the organizati­on took no official stance on Britain’s break with the continent, Lovett said his years of work in the bureaucrat­ic weeds has made him skeptical of what was once billed as the grand European project.

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 ?? JOSHUA BRIGHT/ THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Beekeeping is one of the many esoteric industries that will be affected by ‘Brexit,’ which will free the United Kingdom of European Union regulation­s that affect many products (including bees).
JOSHUA BRIGHT/ THE WASHINGTON POST Beekeeping is one of the many esoteric industries that will be affected by ‘Brexit,’ which will free the United Kingdom of European Union regulation­s that affect many products (including bees).

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