An agricultural Model Good for Pollinators: the way forward Noa Simon Brussels, 6 Nov 2013
Mar 31, 2015
An agricultural Model Good for Pollinators: the way forward
Noa SimonBrussels, 6 Nov 2013
Why to question the agricultural model ?
imbalance in the ecosystems and threats to ecosystem services, e.g. lack of pollinators, crashes in biodiversity (both species richness and population sizes)
chemical residues in foodstuffs
social and economical upheaval, e.g. decrease in the number of family farms, dependency of farmers on the agro-chemical/seed industry, soaring production costs
This system has not solved worldwide hunger and food insecurity
Bees - assessing environmental sustainability linked to farming practices
© UNAAPI
Agricultural tools allowing intensive agriculture
Some examples: Pesticides Genetic modification of organismsNew technologies: nanotechnology, interfering
RNAs, etc.
Double-edged weapons often presented as opportunities by their developers, which become
counterproductive for sustainability
WHY?Because their logic goes against life
Pesticides - Why to be concerned?
• TOXIC - more than 7 000 times more toxic to bees than DDT, effective at the level of nanograms/bee (0.000 000 001 g) – detection ?
• PREVENTIVE USE
• Chemical properties allow uses that enable WIDE DISTRIBUTION IN THE ENVIRONMENT – water, air, flowers... - HIGHLY PERSISTENT
Why to promote bee-friendly agricultural models?
Because we need bees for our future
They stimulate life (biodiversity and biodiversity stimulates their well-being)
They ensure long-term sustainability of food production – FOR FREE !!
Agrochemistry → Growing movement to use agronomic practices
What can be done?
Be consistent with the EU legislation and ensure a coherent farming policy
CROP PROTECTION - FROM ERRADICATION TO MANAGEMENT - Limit the use of pesticides (e.g. Integrated Pest Management, organic production, biological control, etc.)
Elimination of preventive uses of chemicals
Incentivise farmers for NOT using pesticides (e.g. Offer compensations in case o economic loss due to pests)
Recover agronomical knowledge: Enabling farmers to base their practices on facts
INDEPENDENT training programmes for farmers, agro-technicians, agronomists and researchers
What can be done? Create an effective platform to share
information on alternatives
Support and fund independent and
participatory research: to build the scientific foundations for a
transition to fair and sustainable agricultural
systems
Restrict the influence of pesticide producing
industries
Use of resistant crop varieties (e.g. Multi-resistant wheat)
Return of agronomic practices: Crop rotation, multi-cropping, stimulation of beneficial insects
Crops attractive to bees (e.g. pulses)
No authorisation of techniques that cannot be adequately monitored or
evaluated
EBC proposes
A charter – For Sustainable Agriculture and Countryside - For Pollinator-friendly Farming: How can we 'Bee the change'?
Proposals – Report « Pollinator friendly farming is possible »
Thank you very much for your attention!
Bee-Life - European Beekeeping [email protected]
www.bee-life.eu