Environment Policy UK: National Pollinator Strategy inquiry reports

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The UK House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee produced a report in July 2014 on DEFRA's National Pollinator Strategy.  The National Pollinator Strategy has been in draft and a consultation has recently been completed - finalization is planned for later in the year.  The EAC conducted an earlier 2013 inquiry on Pollinators and Pesticides - part of a series of UK policy activities looking at pollinator impacts.

The inquiry on the National Pollinator Strategy makes the following key points:

  • Defra's plans for research on the role and value of pollinators, and the impacts of pesticides, are welcome.  A national monitoring framework is a good idea - a clear baseline will be an important first step.
  • The involvement of industry funding for critical research is a possible difficulty.  Independence of research is essential - with peer review and publication of results.
  • Schemes within UK implementation of the EU Common Agricultural policy must support and protect pollinators - this must be included in forthcoming review.
  • The final National Pollinator Strategy must give a clear view of what Integrated Pest Management involves, and ensure that interpretation of IPM reflects
  • best practice elsewhere
  • Public engagement in protecting pollinators is a good thing, including pollinator-friendly
  • gardening
  • There is disagreement with the UK government of interpreting and possibly weakening the "precautionary principle" by including economic considerations.
  • The UK should, in the strategy, accept the European risk assessments underpinning the neonicotinoid ban and will "neither seek to end it when a European review is conducted in 2015 nor otherwise circumvent it".

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Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith