EPA: Bee reviews will not be rushed

  • EPA does not intend to further accelerate its review of neonicotinoid pesticides which some beekeepers and environmental groups are blaming for bee kills.

In response to a letter from several senators, Jim Jones, acting assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention, said that although the agency is concerned about potential pesticides’ impacts on bees, it does not intend to further accelerate its review of neonicotinoid pesticides which some beekeepers and environmental groups are blaming for bee kills.

In a July 26 letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Sens. Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Leahy (D-Va.), and Whitehouse (D-R.I.) asked EPA to expedite its review of the neonicotinoid insecticides.

"I want to assure you that the EPA is focused on addressing the potential effects of pesticides on pollinators and is engaged in national and international efforts to address those concerns," Jones wrote in the Aug. 21 response.

Jones stated that these reviews will take time. "As part of advancing our understanding in the context of reevaluation, the EPA has already required six specific studies to address uncertainties related to potential honey bee exposure, and effects from imidacloprid alone,” Jones wrote. “Additional, similar studies will be required of other neonicotinoid insecticides in the near future. These studies, while underway or anticipated, will require time to complete. For example, based on current workplan schedules for the neonicotinoids, the registrants are generating exposure and effects data to be submitted to EPA by the end of 2015."

EPA has admitted that it does not have the appropriate data or methodologies to accurately assess pesticides effects on honey bee populations. On Aug. 16, the agency released its Draft Pollinator Risk Assessment Framework, developed in conjunction with Canada's Pest Management Regulatory Agency and the California Dept. of Pesticide Regulation, for public comment.

The framework also was the point of discussion for a recently held Federal Insecticide, Fungicide & Rodenticide Act Scientific Advisory Committee meeting.

Discuss this Article 4

Crashaxe (not verified)
on Sep 27, 2012

To remove the pesticides from farming to protect the Bee's would cost the chemical / drug companies Trillions of dollars so don't expect anything to move along too fast, as the EPA is owned by big chem/drug manufactures.

Anonymous (not verified)
on Sep 29, 2012

It's hard to believe that in a country so important as the United Statesthe authorities of major American agency, that should take care of the protection of people and wildlife in the environment, they blindly submit to capitalist interests of such companies, which are producing neonicotinoids and other pesticides as harmful to the life. These companies are only concerned about their profits. They do neither worry the lives of their leaders even less the lives of billions of people around the planet EARTH. They have alternative more sustainable, but prefer to impose those that give them better possibilities to have greater immediate profits. I used to believe that the EPA was an agency that was concerned about the lives of the American people, but today I know that everything that comes from this agency means purely and simply cover the financial interests of powerful groups. The people responsible for these groups also has life and family and are not immune to the side effects of these insecticides. In the near future they will repent, but maybe it will be late .... Just to remind the great scientist Einstein, who said many years ago that if bees vanish from the earth, human life in a short time would have the same fate.

ChemieBabe (not verified)
on Sep 27, 2012

Oh, so we should just throw the baby out with the bath water,so to speak? The EPA is no friend of the Ag. Industry my friend. You need to do some actual research and not just react emotionally to this article.

Anonymous (not verified)
on Apr 9, 2013

Hopefully there will be a few bees left by the time the EPA gets around to figuring out what the beekeepers already know.

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