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Real Food

Real Food News

2003

21 July

Pesticide review fails consumers and farmers

A new report from Friends of the Earth and PAN UK attacks the Government for failing to grasp a golden opportunity to find safer alternatives to chemical pesticides, leaving farmers with little alternative to the toxic products currently in use. The report, Breaking the pesticide chain, is being published to coincide with the withdrawal from the market of 320 pesticide products across the EU this week. In the UK 45 pesticides will be banned. Friends of the Earth and PAN UK welcome the ban, but say the review has failed consumers and farmers by not going far enough.

The report shows that:

The report warns that UK farmers may be at a disadvantage compared to farmers in neighbouring countries because the UK Government has not ensured that alternative means of pest management are available. Instead of protecting the environment the review could lead to more imported food with associated environmental damage as food is transported over longer distances.

There are several reasons for safer alternatives being blocked including:

Consumers would also benefit from a more proactive approach from the Government to help UK growers and reduce residues in fruit and vegetables. For example:

"The banning of so many pesticides should have been good news for consumers and the environment," said Friends of the Earth's Pesticides Campaigner, Sandra Bell. "But the UK government has failed to grasp the opportunity to develop safer crop protection methods. Instead it has supported the continued use of some very toxic chemicals. Our farmers are stuck with chemical pesticides but alternatives have been shown to work and some are already available in other countries. This is bad news for farmers and for consumers who want pesticide-free food grown in the UK."

"There needs to be a significant increase in funding for research and development of alternatives to these pesticides coming off the UK market," said David Buffin for PAN UK. "The Government should set up a publicly funded service for farmers geared at giving practical advice about progressive reduction of pesticide use".

Friends of the Earth and PAN UK are calling for a shake up of the pesticides approvals process to help safer alternatives reach the market, a significant increase in government-funded research into alternatives and a free independent advice service to farmers about pesticide reduction, to be funded by a tax on pesticide products.

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Content: July 2003