Fears for bees as US set to extend use of toxic
pesticides that paralyse insects
Honey on a farm
near Elkton in rural western Oregon. The use of neonicotinoids, hailed by
industry as a key to bumper crop yields, has exploded since the 1990s.
Oliver Milman
@olliemilman
Tue 8 Mar 2022
12.30 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/mar/08/us-epa-toxic-pesticides-paralyse-bees-insects
The US
Environmental Protection Agency is poised to allow the use of four of the most
devastating chemicals to bees, butterflies and other insects to continue in
America for the next 15 years, despite moves by the European Union to ban the
use of toxins that have been blamed for widespread insect declines.
The EPA is
widely expected to confirm a proposed plan outlined last year that will extend
the use of imidacloprid, thiamethoxam, clothianidin and dinotefuran on US
farmland for the next 15 years, even though the agency has noted “ecological
risks of concern, particularly to pollinators and aquatic invertebrates”.
These four
insecticides are all types of neonicotinoids, a class of chemicals that is
widely used on crops to treat them for pests but has been found to cause
devastation among non-target insects, such as bees. The chemicals assault
receptors in an insect’s nerve synapse, causing uncontrollable shaking,
paralysis and death.
Neonicotinoids
are used across 150m acres of American cropland, an area roughly the size of
Texas, and have contributed to the land becoming 48 times more toxic than it
was a quarter of a century ago. The chemicals are water soluble and quickly
leach out of plants into soils and streams, causing such harmful impacts to
wildlife that Canada has restricted their use while the EU has banned the
outdoor deployment of clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiamethoxam.
But while
states such as Connecticut and New Jersey have enacted some curbs on
neonicotinoids, the US federal government is set to bend to pressure from
farming groups and pesticide makers to perpetuate their use nationally.
“We are
already seeing crashes in insect numbers and we don’t have another 15 years to
waste,” said Nathan Donley, environmental health science director at the Center
for Biological Diversity.
“It’s frustrating
to see the EPA go down this path. We really are at a crossroads – we can follow
the science and the rest of the world or we can go out on our own and appease
the chemical industry.”
An EPA
spokeswoman said that review decisions for the neonicotinoids will be issued in
“late 2022” and that mitigation rules for their use are being considered. “We
understand the importance of pollinators for healthy ecosystems and a
sustainable food supply,” she said, adding that the EPA “is working
aggressively to protect pollinators, including bees”.
An outright
ban, similar to the EU, appears unlikely for the US, however. “While the agency
reviews the regulatory efforts of the EU, EPA also looks at regulation in
countries such as Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, and others that share
our risk-based approach to regulation,” said the spokeswoman. “The differences
in the details of our underlying laws can naturally lead to different
regulatory conclusions.”
The use of
neonicotinoids, hailed by industry as a key to bumper crop yields, has exploded
since the 1990s. The chemicals are sprayed directly on to fruit and vegetables
but are most commonly found embedded in the coating of corn and soybean seeds
sold by companies such as Bayer and Syngenta to farmers.
Only a
small fraction of the insecticide stays within the growing plant, however,
instead seeping into pollen, water and soils where insects are exposed to it.
Researchers have found that the cognitive functions of bees are scrambled by
the chemicals, making them unable to find their way to their hives, while
affected beetles stagger around as if drunk.
Neonicotinoids
also harm birds, studies have shown, while their benefits are questionable,
with crop yields in many cases not improved by the indiscriminate use of the
chemicals.
“These
insecticides are not helping the productivity of crops on fields – it seems an
amazing effort to blanket all these acres with something that doesn’t have a
return on investment,” said John Tooker, an entomologist at Penn State
University.
“These
seeds are marketed so well to farmers that they become scared they will have a
catastrophic outbreak of pests if they don’t use them, even though this is
unlikely. It has contributed to this toxic landscape across the country.”
The
application of pesticides, along with habitat loss and climate change, has been
cited as the main causes of spectacular insect declines recorded in the US as
well as several European countries. Worldwide, it is estimated that insect
populations are dropping by as much as 2% a year, with the United Nations
warning that half a million species could be wiped out this century.
Tooker said
that neonicotinoids, if used judiciously, can be useful but that their ubiquity
has contributed to insects’ woes. “It’s difficult to dismiss the increasing
toxicity in the landscape and think it’s doing nothing to insect populations,”
he said. “These are the most powerful insecticides ever produced. We are just
making insects’ lives harder in every possible way.”
Environmental
groups, meanwhile, have launched a legal effort to force the EPA to regulate
neonicotinoid-coated seeds and have urged the agency to reduce the number of
“emergency” permits issued to states that request the spraying of the chemicals
beyond what is normally allowed without a full review process.
The EPA is
considering allowing farmers in Florida to spray clothianidin on 125,000 acres
of citrus crops, including oranges, grapefruits and lemon, which would be the
ninth consecutive year such an emergency request has been granted.
“It defies
all logic to say an emergency has been going on for nine years, the process has
been clearly abused,” Donley said. “The science is so conclusive that these
chemicals are harmful to the environment that this emergency exemption process
is being used as a backdoor approval that goes on forever.
“We need an
administration that is willing to think about reform and challenge the status
quo and we haven’t seen that with the Biden administration. It is certainly
better than Trump but there is a lot of disappointment at the lost opportunity
for change.”
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