Published on
Thursday, February 05, 2015
byCommon Dreams / http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/02/05/faulting-epa-green-leaders-warn-obama-bees-running-out-time
Faulting EPA, Green Leaders Warn Obama:
Bees Running Out of Time
A federal task
force is moving too slow and the nation's pollinators and food supply are at
perilous risk, environmental NGOs tell president in urgent letter
byJon Queally, staff writer
They speak for the bees.
In a letter destined for President Obama on
Thursday, eleven of the nation's top environmental and public health advocacy
groups, representing millions of Americans, are demanding the administration
take much stronger and swifter action to end the perilous situation of the
nation's most prolific pollinators, most prominently the honey bee, caused by
the widespread use of neonicotinoids, a dangerous class of pesticide.
The letter (pdf) calls on Obama to instruct
the Environmental Protection Agency to immediately suspend neonicotinoid use
and take retroactive and proactive steps to curb their adverse impacts.
"Bees and other pollinators are
essential to our nation’s food supply, farming system, economy, and
environment," the letter states, "but they are in great peril and
populations are dwindling worldwide. A growing body of scientif ic evidence
points to the widespread and indiscriminate use of a class of neurotoxic
pesticides called neonicotinoids (‘neonics’) as a key factor in bee die - offs
."
Specifically, the groups charge that
although Obama appointed a special inter-agency panel, called the Pollinator
Health Task Force, to study pollinator health last year, that effort is simply
moving too slowly and time is running out. Mandated to assess the crisis of bee
die-offse and offer recommendations after 180 days, the Task Force missed their
deadline and have now indicated their report may not arrive until 2016.
"If current rates of bee die-offs
continue,” the letter says, “it is unlikely that the beekeeping industry will
survive EPA’s delayed timeline, putting our agricultural industry and our food
supply at serious risk."
Neonicotinoids, which are often applied to
seeds before planting, are particularly harmful to bees because they poison the
entire plant, including the nectar and pollen which bees eat. At elevated
doses, neonics can kill bees directly, but scientists have found that at lower,
more common levels of exposure the pesticides are negatively affecting bees’
ability to breed, forage, fight disease and survive winter months. What's
additionally troubling, according to neonic opponents, is how a recent EPA
analysis found that neonicotinoid treatment on soybean seeds, one of the
world's premiere monocrops, offers little or no economic benefit to soy
farmers.
In a letter to the Task Force sent in
Novemeber of last year, over 100 scientists and urged immediate action on the
bee-harming pesticides. "The President’s Task Force should listen to the
body of science that links pesticides to bee harm and bee declines,"
stated Jim Frazier, PhD, an emeritus entomology professor at Pennsylvania State
University and commercial
beekeeper advisor who specializes in chemical ecology, who signed a joint
letter from the scientists.
In addition to action on neonics,
Thursday's letter also urges the Obama administration to close a legal loophole
which allow further sale of other insecticides before they are adequately
assessed for safety.
According to the groups—which include
Friends of the Earth, NRDC, Greenpeace USA, Green for All, Earthjustice,
Physicians for Social Responsibility, and five others—the science is in
agreement and the stakes could not be higher:
Various stakeholders are taking steps to
restrict the use of neonicotinoids , because the science is clear that
pesticides are a leading driver of bee declines and are harming many other
important and beneficial organisms, including birds, bats, butterflies,
dragonflies, lacewings, ladybugs, earthworms, small mammals, amphibians,
aquatic insects and soil microbes — putting food production and the environment
in jeopardy. 4 Earlier this year, a global body of twenty - nine independent
scientists - the Task Force on Systemic Pesticides - reviewed more than 800
peer-reviewed studies published in the last five years, including
industry-sponsored studies, and called for immediate regulatory action to
restrict neonicotinoids.
The letter comes three weeks after over 100
businesses, many of which are members of the American Sustainable Business
Council and the Green America Business Network, sent a similar plea (pdf) to
the president urging action on pesticide use and pollinator protections.
Representing companies from a variety of
sectors and industries, the business leaders said they were "gravely
concerned that if neonicotinoids continue to be allowed into our environment at
current rates, this practice will have devastating impacts on our food,
ecosystems, and economic wellbeing."
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