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Join the fight to Save our Sprays - Jane King's blog

Jane King's blog

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Join the fight to Save our Sprays

Farmers like to see Farmers Weekly campaigning on their behalf but you have to pick your moments and you have to hook others in to make it fly..  Timing and themes are everything when you are campaigning for change.  So this week we're pushing the boat out with something extremely important to the arable sector. We've launched a new campaign: Save Our Sprays:  Keep farming productive, which is all about lobbying the EU Commission on its proposals to tighten up pesticide approval regulation.  

 It's crazy to think the regulators are making life even harder for the arable sector at a time when some parts of the world are suffering catastrophic famine and climate change continues to put more pressure on Europe as a mainstream crop producer. 

 This is the right theme at the right time because the proposals could wipe out more than 80 per cent of the pesticides, herbicides and fungicides commonly used on British farms.  It would have far reaching implications for the future of European agriculture and is worrying growers the length and breadth of the country. It's crazy to think the regulators are making life even harder for the arable sector at a time when some parts of the world are suffering catastrophic famine and climate change continues to put more pressure on Europe as a mainstream crop producer. .         

Our view is that it's perfectly understandable for European politicians and bureaucrats to question the threat of these substances to human health and the environment and to want to limit or stop their use if they are dangerous.  But it's not acceptable to force farmers to abandon these sprays before it is adequately proven that they cause harm.

Just because a product has hazardous properties doesn't mean it's dangerous.  A cup of coffee, for example, contains carcinogens and toxins, but we don't view a latte or capuccino as dangerous. 

That's why we're joining forcing with the NFU, the Crop Protection Association and others to push for two demands:

*  We want an EU wide impact assessment on the proposals so that politicians have all the evidence and the likely implications for the public, the environment, the food supply, prices and farm incomes.  

*  We also want a clear definition of the hazard criteria that determine whether a pesticide can be used.  And we are calling for no more hazard criteria to be added.. 

Commentators predict that crop production in this country could be halved and food prices will go sky high if the EU Commission has its way, so we must put the pressure on now.

There's lots you can do to help support the campaign and press the Commission to do the right thing: 

Sign up to our e-petition at www.fwi.co.uk/sos.

Find your local Member of the European Parliament and write to him/her explaining the damage this could do to your business.  Finding your MEP is easy simply go to www.europarl.org.uk/uk_meps for an interactive map.

In the next few weeks, we will be explaining more about the campaign in the magazine and online, so watch this space.  We are hopeful that we can galvanise support from our Eurofarm colleagues overseas.  They head up the equivalent of Farmers Weekly - publications and websites serving farming audiences right across Europe - and could help us reach millions of people as a powerful lobbying tool.  So  don't sit on the sidelines, it's time to get active and show the European politicians we mean business. 

    

Published 01 August 2008 15:23 by Jane King | [Edit Post]

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