Yahoo – AFP,
June 26, 2017
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The United Nations said last year that 40 percent of invertebrate pollinators -- particularly bees and butterflies -- risk global extinction |
French
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe weighed in on a row between his environment and
agriculture ministers on Monday to rule that a pesticide found harmful to bees
would be banned in 2018 as scheduled.
A ban on
neonicotinoids, set down in a 2016 law on protecting biodiversity, has been
fiercely opposed by cereal and sugar-beet farmers, who dispute research
highlighting the chemicals' risk to bees.
In the
first sign of discord in the week-old French government, Agriculture Minister
Stephane Travert has been lobbying for the upcoming ban to be eased.
He
complained that French law "went further than European law" on the
issue, implying that it put French farmers at a disadvantage against
competitors.
The European
Union set down a temporary ban on the use of three key neonicotinoids in 2013.
Environment
Minister Nicolas Hulot, a former activist and high-profile TV presenter, hit
back that "where health is at risk, I won't make any concessions."
"We
have made too many concessions" in this area, he said. "We will find
out about the disaster soon enough."
France's
national food safety watchdog, Anses, is due to publish a report on the
chemicals' impact on human health by the end of the year.
It was left
to Prime Minister Philippe to settle the issue as he released a statement
saying: "The government has decided not to roll back the provisions of the
2016 law."
Philippe
said the decision had been made on June 21.
Neonicotinoid debate
Farmers'
representatives claim there is no cost-effective alternative to neonicotinoids,
a pesticide based on the chemical structure of nicotine that targets insects'
nervous systems.
Studies
have blamed the chemical for harming bee reproduction and foraging by
diminishing sperm quality and scrambling memory and navigation functions. It
has also been linked to lower disease resistance.
The makers
say neonicotinoids are safe if used correctly. They also maintain that evidence
linking these chemicals to a plunge in bee populations is flimsy and that the
phenomenon is due to a number of factors, such as viruses and parasites.
There are
some 20,000 species of bees responsible for fertilising more than 90 percent of
the world's 107 major crops.
Under the
2016 French law, which was fiercely debated in parliament, use of
neonicotinoids will be banned from September 1 2018, with possible exemptions
until July 1 2010.
The
exemptions will be permitted on a case-by-case basis, and only when there are
no immediate alternatives to a neonicotinoid product.
Travert
pushed for the exemption clause to be used generously -- "when there is no
substitute product, we should be able to authorise exemptions so that our
farmers continue to operate successfully."
Macron in
February had told the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) that he intended to stand
by the ban.
Environment
groups said Travert seems to have badly misread the political mood, given
expectations that the EU will widen the 2013 ban.
The
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), whose findings underpinned the EU
moratorium, is to complete a wider scientific review this year.
Travert,
47, is a former Socialist who became an early supporter in 2014 of Macron's
centrist movement.
He was
rewarded with the agriculture portfolio, which carries great weight in France,
in the post-election ministerial lineup announced on June 21.
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