EU bans bee-harming sprays

Insecticides that can harm bees have been banned from all outdoor use in the European Union.

EU countries backed a proposal to ban all neonicotinoids, extending a partial ban put in place in 2013.

“All outdoor uses will be banned and the neonicotinoids in question will only be allowed in permanent greenhouses where exposure of bees is not expected,” the European Commission said in a statement.

Bayer, which manufactures one of the substances in active use in the EU, called the ban “a sad day for farmers and a bad deal for Europe” and said it would not help bees.

Many farmers, it said, had no other way of controlling pests and that the result was more spraying and a return to older, less effective chemicals.

The use of neonicotinoids in the European Union has been restricted to certain crops since 2013, but environmental groups have called for a total ban and sparked a debate across the continent about the wider use of chemicals in farming.

Campaign group Friends of the Earth described the decision of EU governments a “tremendous victory” for bees and for the environment.

“The European Commission must now focus on developing a strong pollinator initiative that boosts bee-friendly habitat and helps farmers cut pesticide- use,” it said.

Both Bayer and another company, Syngenta, have challenged the 2013 partial ban at the European Court of Justice. A verdict is due on 17 May.

Reuters