EPA Considers Allowing Bee-Killing Pesticide to Be Sprayed on 165 Million Acres of U.S. Farmland
19
December, 2017
The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will consider allowing the
bee-killing pesticide thiamethoxam to be sprayed on the most widely
grown crops in the U.S. The application, if approved, would allow the
highly toxic pesticide to be sprayed directly on 165 million acres of
wheat, barley, corn, sorghum, alfalfa, rice and potato.
The
proposal by the agrochemical giant Syngenta to dramatically escalate
use of the harmful neonicotinoid pesticide came last Friday, on the
same day the EPA released new assessments of the extensive dangers
posed by neonicotinoids, including thiamethoxam.
"If
the EPA grants Syngenta's wish, it will spur catastrophic declines of
aquatic invertebrates and pollinator populations that are already in
serious trouble," said Lori Ann Burd, director of the Center for
Biological Diversity's environmental health program. "You know
the pesticide-approval process is broken when the EPA announces it
will consider expanding the use of this dangerous pesticide on the
same day its own scientists reveal that the chemical kills birds and
aquatic invertebrates."
Neonicotinoids
have long been known to pose serious harm to bee populations. But the
new EPA assessments found the commonly used pesticides can kill and
harm birds of all sizes and pose significant dangers to aquatic
invertebrates.
Thiamethoxam
is currently widely used as a seed coating for these crops. This
application would allow it to be sprayed directly on the crops,
greatly increasing the amount of pesticide that could be used.
The
just-released aquatic and non-pollinator risk assessment found that
the majority of uses of the neonicotinoid on currently registered
crops resulted in risks to freshwater invertebrates that exceeded
levels of concern—the threshold at which harm is known to occur.
The
EPA did not assess risks associated with spraying the pesticides on
the crops it announced it was considering expanding use to on Friday.
But it is likely that increasing the number of crops approved for
spraying would dramatically increase that risk.
In
January the EPA released a preliminary assessment of on-field
exposures to thiamethoxam that found all uses of the pesticide—on
foliar, soil and seeds—result in exposures that exceed the level of
concern for acute and chronic risk to adult bees. But the agency has
taken no steps to restrict use of these products and is now
considering expanding their use.
Despite
growing scientific and public concern about neonicotinoids, the
application for expanded use of thiamethoxam was not announced by the
EPA but quietly posted in the Federal Register.
"For
years the EPA and pesticide companies bragged that by using treated
seeds they were avoiding spraying insecticides, and despite the
science showing that these treated seeds were deadly to birds,
claimed that they were environmentally beneficial," said Burd.
"But we can expect the Trump EPA to now ignore the risks to
birds and bees and approve these ultra-toxic pesticides to be sprayed
across hundreds of millions of U.S. acres."
Neonicotinoids
are a class of pesticides known to have both acute and chronic
effects on aquatic invertebrates, honeybees, birds, butterflies and
other pollinator species; they are a major factor in overall
pollinator declines. These systemic insecticides cause entire plants,
including pollen and fruit, to become toxic to pollinators; they are
also slow to break down and therefore build up in the environment.
A
large and growing body of independent science links neonicotinoids to
catastrophic bee declines. Twenty-nine independent scientists who
conducted a global review of more than 1,000 independent studies on
neonicotinoids found overwhelming evidence linking the pesticides to
declines in populations of bees, birds, earthworms, butterflies and
other wildlife.
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