More than
500 million bees dropped dead in Brazil in the last three months, mostly as a
result of pesticide use.
The
pesticides used are said to have contained products which are banned in Europe,
such as neonicotinoids and fipronil.
Last April,
the EU imposed an near-total ban on neonicotinoids because of the serious harm
it could cause to bees, however in the same year Brazil lifted restrictions on
pesticides.
According to
an investigation by Greenpeace’s Unearthed, the use of pesticides in the
country has increased, with 193 products containing chemicals banned in the EU
registered in Brazil in the last three years.
Data showed
a significant spike in approvals of new environmentally hazardous pesticide
products under the governments of Michel Temer and current president Jair
Bolsonaro. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, as cited by Bloomberg, Brazil’s pesticide use increased 770 per cent
from 1990 to 2016.
Brazil has
become the biggest buyer of pesticides in the world; the country uses them
because its economy is reliant on agriculture.
However,
almost half of all products approved since Bolsonaro took office reportedly
contain active ingredients featured on Pesticide Action Network’s (PAN) list of
highly hazardous pesticides, indicating they pose a risk to human health or the
environment.
Brazil’s
health watchdog Anvisa reportedly found 20 per cent of samples contained
pesticide residues above permitted levels, or contained unauthorised
pesticides.
Greenpeace
report there are concerns the widespread use of pesticides in the country could
have major consequences for the country’s wildlife and environment.
The mass
deaths were reported by beekeepers in four Brazilian states. According to
Bloomberg, 400 million bees were found dead in Rio Grande do Sul alone, while
seven million were found in São Paulo, 50 million in Santa Catarina and 45
million Mato Grosso do Sul.
Lab research
points to pesticides as the main cause of death for most of the bees in Brazil.
Aldo
Machado, vice president of Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul beekeeping association,
told Bloomberg his colony was decimated in less than 48 hours after some of the
bees first showed signs of illness.
He
explained:
As soon as
the healthy bees began clearing the dying bees out of the hives, they became
contaminated. They started dying en masse.
Bees play a
vital part in the food chain, with around one-third of the food we eat relying
on pollination mainly by bees.
The bee
population is suffering worldwide as a result of habitat loss and climate
change as well as pesticides.
500,000,000 bees died in Brazil this year, with most showing traces of Fipronil, an insecticide banned in the EU and a possible human carcinogen according to US EPA— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) August 20, 2019
That’s after President Bolsonaro allowed a record 290 pesticides, up 27% over last yearhttps://t.co/u3I6IxJf5q pic.twitter.com/E7pgvn6hjZ
In the past
year in the US beekeepers lost four in 10 of their honeybee colonies, mass
deaths have been reported in 20 regions in Russia and at least one million bees
died in South Africa in November 2018 as a result of fipronil, BBC News
reports.
Canada,
Mexico, Argentina and Turkey have all also reported mass die-offs of bees in
the last 18 months.
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