Analysis from EU’s scientific risk assessors
finds neonicotinoids pose a serious danger to all bees, making total field ban
highly likely
Damian CarringtonEnvironment
editor
Wed 28 Feb 2018 14.12 GMTFirst
published on Wed 28 Feb 2018 11.17 GMT
The world’s most widely used insecticides
pose a serious danger to both honeybees and wild bees, according to a major new
assessment from the European Union’s scientific risk assessors.
The conclusion, based on analysis of more
than 1,500 studies, makes it highly likely that the neonicotinoid pesticides
will be banned from all fields across the EU when nations vote on the issue
next month.
The report from the European Food Safety
Authority (Efsa),
published on Wednesday, found that the risk to bees varied depending on the
crop and exposure route, but that “for all the outdoor uses, there was at least
one aspect of the assessment indicating a high risk.” Neonicotinoids, which are
nerve agents, have been shown to cause a wide range of harm to bees, such as
damaging memory and reducing queen numbers.
Jose Tarazona, head of Efsa’s pesticides
unit, said: “The availability of such a substantial amount of data has enabled
us to produce very detailed conclusions. There is variability in the
conclusions [and] some low risks have been identified, but overall the risk to
the three types of bees we have assessed is confirmed.”
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