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Seed
giant Syngenta is asking federal regulators in the United States to raise the
allowable levels of a certain pesticide used on select crops despite warnings
from critics.
According
to a Sept. 5 document published on the Federal Register, the agri-business
corporation wants the US Environmental Protection Agency to increase the amount
of thiamethoxam that can legally be used on certain crops, raising concerns
among pesticide opponents who say a surge in chemical use could cause
widespread problems. Syngenta developed the chemical, and the compound was
first approved for use in the US in 1999.
Among
the requests made by Syngenta earlier this month are that EPA increase the
amount of thiamethoxam that can be used on sweet corn crops from 0.1 parts per
million (ppm) to 5.0ppm — a 50-fold increase — and raising the allowable amount
on hay from wheat by 400 times over. The company is also asking that the EPA
make changes to the thiamethoxam tolerance levels concerning alfalfa and
barley.
Ann
Bryan, a spokeswoman for the company, told E&E News that Syngenta is
seeking the changes because it would allow the chemical to be used as a leaf
spray and not just a seed treatment, in turn letting farmers douse crops with
thiamethoxam in an effort to treat late- to midseason insects.
But
as Tiffany Stecker reported for E&E, the chemical in question is part of a
family of insecticides that has previously come under attack for being linked
to adverse effects on ecosystems of all sorts.
“Neonicotinoid
pesticides are one of many factors that scientists say have caused a dramatic
decline in pollinators, insects and animals that help crop production by
carrying pollen from one plant to another,” Stecker wrote,
adding that more than half of the managed honeybee colonies in the US have
vanished during the last decade, according to the Pollinator Partnership
nonprofit group.
“Scientists
say neonicotinoids can suppress bees' immune systems, making them more
vulnerable to viruses and bacteria. The Fish and Wildlife Service agreed to
phase out neonicotinoids on wildlife refuges nationwide starting in January
2016,” she added.
As
RT reported previously, the European Union has banned neonicotinoids for two
years after studies there suggest similarly. A 2012 report found that “sub-lethal exposure to neonicotinoids is
likely the main culprit for the occurrence of CCD,” or Colony
Collapse Disorder — a phenomenon in which workers bees suddenly disappear — and
the Ontario Ministry of Environment and the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and
Rural Affairs came to similar conclusions last year.
“The
information evaluated suggests that planting of corn seeds treated with the
nitro-guanidine insecticides clothianidin and/or thiamethoxam contributed to
the majority of the bee mortalities that occurred in corn growing regions of
Ontario and Quebec in spring
2012,” the Canadian agencies found.
Now
as Syngenta petitions for an increase in tolerance levels, advocates say the
company should reconsider.
“Syngenta claims that foliar applications
will be more likely to stick to the leaves of crops, and thus are less risky to
pollinators,” the Beyond Pesticides group wrote in a recent press
release. “[B]ut the fact remains
that these chemicals are systemic and persistent, and any amount applied will
contaminate soil, and has potential the be expressed in the crop’s pollen,
nectar and guttation (dew) droplets on which pollinators forage and drink.”
Adding
to that statement during a recent interview with E&E’s Stecker, Aimee
Simpson, the police director and staff attorney for Beyond Pesticides,
suggested that Syngenta is taking the opposite approach amidst growing concerns
surrounding CCD and other issues linked to neonicotinoids like thiamethoxam.
"Instead of figuring ways to stop or reduce
the use, it's significantly increasing the amount on forage materials and other
crops," Simpson said.
"Growers depend on neonicotinoids and other
crop protection products to increase crop productivity,"
Syngenta’s Bryan countered Simpson’s remark. “And the scientific evidence clearly shows that bees and other
pollinators can coexist safely with modern agricultural technologies like
neonicotinoids when product labels are followed.”
“Syngenta is committed to biodiversity,
including thriving pollinators,” Bryan said.
The EPA is accepting
comments concerning changes to thiamethoxam tolerance through October 6, 2014.
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