Friday, January 13, 2017
EPA
Acknowledges Neonics' Harm to Bees, Then 'Bows to Pesticide Industry'
'This is like a doctor diagnosing your illness but then deciding
to withhold the medicine you need to cure it'
www.commondreams.org/news/2017/01/13/epa-acknowledges-neonics-harm-bees-then-bows-pesticide-industry
The Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday published two
bee-related announcements, but with both, say environmental groups, the agency
has failed the pollinators.
One was its "Policy to Mitigate the Acute Risk to Bees from
Pesticide Products." It states that
the "policy is not a regulation or an order and, therefore, does not
legally compel changes to pesticide product registrations."
The other release was a set of draft
risk assessments for three neonicotinoids, or
"neonics." They are the most widely used class of insecticides, and
they have been linked to
bee harm. The new assessments were for clothianidin, thiamethoxam, and
dinotefuran, and an updated assessment on another, imidacloprid, was also
included.
Those assessments, according to Paul Towers, policy advocate and
spokesperson for Pesticide Action Network,
"are full of gaps and continue to ignore many of the most significant
threats from neonicotinoids, particularly when they're used as seed coatings on
common crops," their most frequent use.
Yet "[e]ven in their limited scope, these risk assessments
clearly show harm to bees and other pollinators from uses of neonics,"
said Larissa Walker, program director for the Center for Food Safety's
pollinator program.
Added Lori
Ann Burd, director of the Center for Biological Diversity's environmental
health program: "It's outrageous that on the same day the EPA acknowledged
these dangerous pesticides are killing bees it also reversed course on
mandating restrictions on their use," referring to the agency's backing
away from a 2015 proposal.
"This is like a doctor diagnosing your illness but then
deciding to withhold the medicine you need to cure it," Burd said.
The Center also referred to the policy's failure to mandate
restrictions as "a deep bow to the pesticide industry."
To truly take steps to protect bees, as well as our
environment, said Tiffany
Finck-Haynes, food futures campaigner at Friends of the Earth, the EPA
"should take bee-toxic pesticides off the market."
The announcements came during the final days of the Obama
administration, and as President-elect Donald Trump has already made clear
he'll be heading an anti-science
administration, with picks like Scott Pruitt, whose record is "completely
antithetical" to the mission of the EPA, which Trump wants him
to lead.
"It's shocking that the EPA's response to the crisis of declining pollinators and the abundant science linking that decline to neonicotinoid insecticides is to meekly offer a policy encouraging industry to consider restricting pesticide use in limited situations where plants are blooming while commercial honeybees have been brought in to work the fields," the Center for Biological Diversity's Burd continued. " "This is a rejection of science that should be deeply troubling to all Americans as we move into a Trump administration."
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives."
Eugene Victor Debs
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