'No knee-jerk ban on Cruiser in the UK '
The European Commission has vowed to study the science before any EU-wide
ban on pesticides linked to the decline of bees can even be considered.
The French government has banned the use
of Cruiser OSR, a neonicotinoids-based seed treatment used on oilseed rape
crops.
The French Ministry of Agriculture
withdrew the licence for Cruiser on oilseed rape in June
after two studies linked neonicotinoids to honey bee colony collapse disorder.
The studies claimed that neonicotinoids
contain chemicals that disorientate bees and prevent them from finding their
hives. But critics claim they are seriously flawed.
In a letter to George Lyon, Liberal Democrat MEP for Scotland, EU
health and consumer commissioner John Dalli has stated that he will not be
rushed into any knee-jerk reaction by France's decision to ban Cruiser OSR,
which is widely used by oilseed rape growers across the UK.
The EU commission will wait until the
European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) has carried out a broad assessment into any
link between neonicotinoids and bee health later this year before announcing
any decision.
The EU's position was backed by the vast
majority of member states at a food chain and animal health meeting held in Brussels in July.
"Instead he will wait on a proper
assessment by the European Food Safety Agency into whether there is any link
between these pesticides and the decline in bee numbers."
In his letter, Mr Dalli
said decisions on the safety of products must be based on "proper and
robust science based risk assessments".
"These seed treatments are much
more environmentally friendly as they target the pests in the seed-bed and they
have been used extensively on over 3m ha of oilseed rape in Europe
over the last few years without incident," said Mr Lyon .
"It would surely be a retrograde
step if UK
growers were forced to go back to the days of indiscriminate blanket spraying
of their crops unless there was independent scientific evidence of a proven
risk."
The ban in France
does not affect British growers and Cruiser is still free to use as normal in
the current growing season.
Syngenta, which produces Cruiser, a seed
treatment coated on to rapeseeds, has vowed to fight the ban in France.
The Swiss agrichemical company is taking
its case to the Conseil
d'Etat , the highest court in France .
How many “broad
assessments” are they going to have?
There have been three very comprehensive robust scientific
assessments by 3 well know universities here in the UK and all; point the finger at the
neonicotinoids as the major cause of navigational problems in bees.
Like most of these decisions it will be who is prepared to spend
the most defending their cause who will win. And let’s face it; these huge
multi-national drug companies have the most to loose so will spend millions
defending their product even if it ends up destroying the world.
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