Yahoo – AFP,
Kerry Sheridan, 20 June 2014
Washington (AFP) - The White House on Friday ordered environmental regulators to review the effect that pesticides may be having on bees and other pollinators that have suffered significant losses in recent years.
Honey bees work in their hive at a outdoor market August 15, 2013, in Washington (AFP Photo/Paul J. Richards) |
Washington (AFP) - The White House on Friday ordered environmental regulators to review the effect that pesticides may be having on bees and other pollinators that have suffered significant losses in recent years.
Environmental
advocates welcomed the plan but said it did not go far enough, noting that the
European Union has already banned three common pesticides, known as
neonicotinoids, on the basis that they were making bees sick.
Honey bees
contribute $15 billion in value to US crops annually, and have suffered severe
losses in recent years due to a phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder.
Scientists
still do not fully understand why various types of bees and butterflies are
dying, but research points to a combination of stresses, including parasites,
pathogens and exposure to pesticides widely used in farming.
The
government's new plan calls for the Environmental Protection Agency to
"assess the effect of pesticides, including neonicotinoids, on bee and
other pollinator health and take action, as appropriate," within 180 days.
The memo
signed by President Barack Obama also called for a sweeping strategy to be
produced across government agencies in the next six months that would protect
pollinators by improving their habitat.
Measures
include planting flowers along highways, landscaping federal facilities with
plants that are beneficial to pollinators, and expanding pollinator habitat in
conservation areas.
"Over
the past few decades, there has been a significant loss of pollinators,
including honey bees, native bees, birds, bats, and butterflies, from the
environment," Obama said.
"The
problem is serious and requires immediate attention."
The US
Department of Agriculture also directed an extra $8 million toward a program in
some midwestern states to cultivate new habitats for honey bees.
However,
environmental groups said the measures fall short.
"President
Obama's announcement on protecting pollinators does not go far enough,"
said Friends of the Earth president Erich Pica.
"The
administration should prevent the release and use of these toxic pesticides
until determined safe," Pica added, noting that the US should follow
Europe's lead.
The
European Commission has restricted the use of three pesticides belonging to the
neonicotinoid family, known as clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiametoxam, for
a period of two years.
The EPA
website says the United States "is not currently banning or severely
restricting the use of the neonicotinoid pesticides."
Instead,
they are "being re-evaluated... to ensure they meet current health and
safety standards."
Larissa
Walker, who heads the Center for Food Safety's pollinator campaign, said the
announcement was "on the right track," but expressed concern.
"Assessment
and habitat building alone won't save our pollinators. We need decisive
action on pesticides," she said.
"We
look to the Obama administration for leadership that will have the lasting
impact we need to keep our pollinator populations sustainable and
healthy."
Farmers use
helicopters to spray insecticide and fertilizer
on wheat crops in Henan
province, China. Photograph:
TPG/Getty Images
|
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Question: Dear Kryon: I would appreciate a perspective on the following: There seems to be two opposed schools of thought with respect to pesticides and their use. One group categorically states that they are very dangerous and that they are responsible for causing cancers etc... (there's a very long list!!) The other group naturally claims that they are perfectly safe with today's technological advances etc.
Answer: The chemicals you are using today are dangerous to your health. The more they are used, the more it will be seen over time. We have indicated before that there are far better natural scientific solutions to protecting your crops. Use biology to balance biology. It is non-toxic and simply an alteration of what already exists.
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