National Farming Union’s
application for banned pesticide use on oil seed rape crops is rejected as
government rules against neonicotinoids for the first time
Friday 13 May 201610.14 BSTLast
modified on Friday 13 May 201611.16 BST
Ministers have rejected an
“emergency” application from the National Farmers Union (NFU) to use banned
pesticides on a third of all oilseed rape crops. Neonicotinoid pesticides have
been shown to be harmful
to bees and were banned
from use on flowering crops by the EU in 2013, a move opposed by the
UK government. But ministers granted a
temporary lifting of the ban in 2015 after the NFU argued it was
needed to fight the cabbage stem flea beetle (CSFB).
However the government’s
scientific advisers said this year’s application, from the NFU and the
Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board, should not be granted. Farming minister
George Eustice then rejected the plan, the first time the government has ruled
against neonicotinoid use.
The Expert
Committee on Pesticides (ECP) said the application contained
“insufficient information to ensure that use will be limited only to those
areas where there is a danger or threat to plant protection and [did not] offer
adequate assurance that the use will be controlled in an appropriate fashion”.
Matt Shardlow, chief
executive of Buglife, said: “Oilseed rape yields went up by 7% last year - this
is not an ‘emergency’, the loss of bees and pollinating insects is the
emergency.
“The decision is great news for
the bees and for the hundreds of thousands of British people who have asked the
government to do more to protect our disappearing pollinators.”
“It is disappointing that the
reasoning of the ECP in refusing to support the applications focusses more on
technical issues relating to targeting and control, rather than the more
obvious point that the confirmed risks of using these agrotoxins clearly
outweigh the elusive claimed benefits,” Shardlow said.
Friends of the Earth’s Dave Timms
said: “The ECP has given a damning verdict on the applications. We hope the NFU
will get the message and give up trying to bring back these dangerous
chemicals. Ministers must now push for the ban on these chemicals to be made
permanent.”
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