Beekeepers Propose Class-Action Lawsuit Over Pesticide Use

fibonacci_bee_pinkA proposed class-action lawsuit has been launched against two chemical companies that make pesticides widely blamed for massive bee deaths, a growing concern in Europe and North America.

Two family-owned Ontario honey producers, who are seeking $450 million in damages, say they want to recover significant losses suffered by Canadian beekeepers due to the widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides since 2006.

The statement of claim alleges that Bayer AG and Syngenta International AG were negligent in their development and distribution of neonicotinoids, as well as permitting or failing to prevent damages to beekeepers. It also alleges that the companies knew or ought to have known that the insecticides would cause damage, given mounting evidence that it presents a risk to bee populations.

“Neonicotinoids are among the most widely used insecticides in Canada and pose serious risks to the bee population primarily because of their persistence in crops and soil, and their potency at low concentrations,” it said.

“Those properties, coupled with the neonicotinoids’ widespread use in many cropping systems and presence in pollen and nectar, resulted in a chronic, continuing and lethal exposure to the bee population.”

Neonics are a preventative pesticide sprayed over crops or coated onto seeds before they are planted. They’re picked up by insects such as bees when plants absorb them into their leaves, flowers, pollen and nectar.

Several products containing neonicotinoids produced by Bayer and Syngenta have received conditional approvals by the federal government, the lawsuit notes.

However, a Health Canada report has suggested that seeds treated with neonicotinoids contributed to the majority of the bee deaths in Ontario and Quebec in 2012, likely due to exposure of the pesticide-laced dust during planting. The government has said it’s monitoring crops this growing season and could impose restrictions after careful evaluation of the impacts of pesticides.

The European Commission has already imposed a temporary ban on the use of neonicotinoids.

More recently, an international panel of 50 scientists working as the Task Force on Systemic Pesticides said they have conclusive evidence that two widely used pesticides are killing bees and other insects, and harming the environment. It said in June that a study of 800 research papers provides evidence that the pesticides are causing the mass deaths of insects that are essential to the process of pollinating most crops.

Continue reading original article by Maria Babbage for Global News

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Source Article from http://fracturedparadigm.com/2014/09/04/beekeepers-propose-class-action-lawsuit-over-pesticide-use/

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