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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

EU backs ban on insecticides to protect honey bees

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Brussels: The EU on Friday backed an almost total ban on insecticides blamed for killing off bee populations, in a move hailed by environmentalists as a “beacon of hope”.


Bees help pollinate 90 per cent of the world’s major crops, but in recent years have been dying off from “colony collapse disorder,” a mysterious scourge blamed partly on pesticides.


European Union countries voted for a ban on the use of three neonicotinoid pesticides in fields, the European Commission said, meaning that they can only now be used in covered greenhouses where they cannot get into the environment.


Campaigners dressed in black and yellow bee suits brought a huge inflatable bee to a rally outside the headquarters of the European Commission in Brussels ahead of the vote.


Chemical giants opposed the decision, saying it would hurt European farmers. The EU brought in a partial ban in 2013 but decided on more drastic action after a major report by European food safety agency said in February that the chemicals posed a risk to honey bees and wild bees.


EU Environment Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis said he was “happy that member states voted in favour of our proposal” to restrict the chemicals and tweeted a picture of the activists.


A Commission statement said EU states had “endorsed a proposal by the European Commission to further restrict the use of three active substances... for which a scientific review concluded that their outdoor use harms bees.”


The pesticides — clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiamethoxam —are based on the chemical structure of nicotine and attack the nervous systems of insect pests.


Environmental groups, which have long campaigned for a ban on neonicotinoids, were abuzz.


Greenpeace said it was “great news for bees, other pollinators and our wider environment”. But it added that “the EU must make sure they’re not simply replaced with other harmful pesticides.”


Friends of the Earth Europe’s bee campaigner Sandra Bell said it was a “tremendous victory for our bees and the wider environment”.


The Avaaz campaign group said that “banning these toxic pesticides is a beacon of hope for bees.”


— AFP


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