French lawmakers approves draft bill

French lawmakers on Tuesday (6 October) approved a draft bill allowing sugar beet growers to use pesticides that are banned to protect honeybees, a move welcomed by farmers hit by crop disease but condemned by green groups as more backsliding by the government.

French lawmakers approves draft bill

To avoid seeing farmers, who experienced an average 15% fall in output [in 2020], turn away from the crop, the government french lawmakers proposed that they would be allowed to use neonicotinoids on sugar beet seeds until July 1, 2023, easing a ban in place since 2018.

“History will remember that, despite scientific evidence and pressure from public opinion, this government continues to encourage the poisoning of soil, animals and our food,” Clement Senechal, campaigner for Greenpeace France, said in a statement.

In France, the European Union’s top sugar producer average yields are seen down 11%, but growers said they fell 30%-50% in fields hit by jaundice.

Originally published by Genetic Literacy Project