Ban the use of neonicotinoid pesticides before they devastate bee populations in the USA

To: Environmental Protection Agency

Neonicotinoid, known as “neonics” for short, is a farm pesticide produced primarily by the German chemical giant Bayer, widely used in the U.S. to coat a massive 142 million acres of corn, wheat, soy and cotton seeds. They are also common ingredients in many home gardening products. However,...

Neonicotinoid, known as “neonics” for short, is a farm pesticide produced primarily by the German chemical giant Bayer, widely used in the U.S. to coat a massive 142 million acres of corn, wheat, soy and cotton seeds. They are also common ingredients in many home gardening products. However, three new studies* link neonics to declining bee populations nationwide - fully a third of commercial beehives, over a million colonies, have disappeared over the past year. The pesticide works as a nerve poison, infecting their insect victims and interfering with their homing ability, which in turn prevents them from making it back to their hives.

Germany and France have already banned pesticides known to cause the death of bees and there is still time to save bees in this country if you follow suit. We urge the EPA to protect nature’s hardest workers; please ban the use of neonicotinoid pesticides from being used on crops and in household products.

*http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2012/03/bayer-pesticide-bees-studies

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142,009 people signed a petition

Healthy bee populations are essential to the production of our food. Bees are attracted to floral nectars and help pollinate the plant, allowing it to reproduce. Therefore, without honey bees, our lives would be impoverished by a general lack of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and other bee-pollinated plant products like corn, apples, oranges, lemons, broccoli, onions, blueberries, cherries, avocados, and many more.

Unfortunately, our widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides is causing a dramatic decline in honey bee populations. The USDA projects that this year's corn crop will cover 94 million acres, all of which will be planted with seeds treated with neonicotinoid pesticides. In small doeses these pesticides damage the bees' immune systems and homing abilities; in large doses the pesticides are lethal.

Sign the petition to put pressure on the EPA to ban the use of these pesticides in order to protect the long-term health of our food system!

Click to find out more about or nation's bee populations and the imminent threat posed by neonicotinoid pesticides: 

  1. Update #3

    Posted on May 2

    We Came, We Swarmed . . . Will We Conquer?

    Bee-decked in black and yellow and armed with 130,000 petition signatures, a swarm of activists buzzed the Washington D.C. headquarters of the EPA on Earth Day to demand a ban on Bayer, Dow and Syngenta's bee-killing neonicotinoid insecticides.

    Neonicotinoid pesticides are blamed for Colony Collapse Disorder, which has already destroyed alarming numbers of honeybee colonies. Bees are exposed to these deadly insecticides primarily...

    We Came, We Swarmed . . . Will We Conquer?

    Bee-decked in black and yellow and armed with 130,000 petition signatures, a swarm of activists buzzed the Washington D.C. headquarters of the EPA on Earth Day to demand a ban on Bayer, Dow and Syngenta's bee-killing neonicotinoid insecticides.

    Neonicotinoid pesticides are blamed for Colony Collapse Disorder, which has already destroyed alarming numbers of honeybee colonies. Bees are exposed to these deadly insecticides primarily through Monsanto's genetically engineered seeds which are coated in pesticides that end up in the crops' nectar and pollen. In countries where neonicotinoids have been banned, bee populations are beginning to recover.

    Europe has come to its senses on the matter of protecting honeybees. This week, the European Commission decided to ban neonicotinoid pesticides known to destroy honeybee populations. The decision was backed by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA).

    But here at home, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is weighing approval of a new pesticide, sulfoxaflor, brought to us by Dow Chemical Co. This despite the EPA's own admission that sulfoxaflor, referred to by some as a "next-generation neonicotinoid," is "very highly toxic" to honeybees.

    If the EPA approves sulfoxaflor, beekeepers say commercial beekeeping will be extinct by 2018.

    Did the EPA hear us? Will the EPA protect honeybees and our food supply? Or protect the chemical companies? Time will tell. Thanks to everyone who swarmed!

    TAKE ACTION: Don't Let the EPA Approve a New Bee-Killing Insecticide

  2. Update #2

    Posted on Mar 20

    Join the Earth Day Swarm to Ban Bee-Killing Pesticides

    What better way to celebrate Earth Day than to act to save honeybees from toxic pesticides? Let's swarm the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency with demands for a ban on the pesticides that are killing the pollinators we need to grow food!

    Thank you for signing the petition! Please help us reach 100,000 signatures by April 22 by sharing the link and inviting your friends.

    If you're near Washington, DC, please join us on...

    Join the Earth Day Swarm to Ban Bee-Killing Pesticides

    What better way to celebrate Earth Day than to act to save honeybees from toxic pesticides? Let's swarm the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency with demands for a ban on the pesticides that are killing the pollinators we need to grow food!

    Thank you for signing the petition! Please help us reach 100,000 signatures by April 22 by sharing the link and inviting your friends.

    If you're near Washington, DC, please join us on Earth Day, Monday, April 22, at 12 noon, to deliver the petition to EPA headquarters. Please RSVP here to join the Earth Day swarm!

    Last year was one of the worst in U.S. history for honey production. Some beekeepers are reporting astonishing winter losses, upwards of 90 percent. Others have reported complete colony loss. Less honey means less food for overwintering bees, putting increased stress on colonies attempting to fight off the spread of colony collapse disorder (CCD).

    CCD is the name given to the precipitous decline of honeybee populations around the world, beginning in 2006. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) reports that, on average, beekeepers are losing over 30% of their honeybee colonies each year, twice what is considered normal. While CCD appears to have multiple interacting causes, a range of scientific evidence points to pesticide exposure as an important contributing factor. Neonicotinoids, a class of potent systemic insecticides, are particularly suspect, especially in combination with the dozens of other pesticides bees are exposed to in their hives and when foraging.

    Interested in the connection between bee deaths and genetically engineered crops? Read this excellent article by Heather Pilatic, Co-director, Pesticide Action Network North America: Bee Kills in the Corn Belt: What's GE Got to Do With It?

    Want to learn more? Check out the great resources at Beyond Pesticides

    Want to be inspired? Watch this amazing video: The Beauty of Pollination

    Please RSVP to take action to save the bees this Earth Day in DC!

  3. Update #1

    Posted on Oct 19, 2012

    Thank you for signing the petition
    this is an important issue because with no bees there will be no Food
    without Our Natural pollinators we will have to Hand Pollinate our crops ,
    This is Now Happening in many places in the world
    Honeybee colony losses have been 30 to 40 percent in the United Kingdom in the recent past and more than 60 percent in the United States

    We Must Stop The Decline Of Our Pollinators
    Future Generations Rely On Us To Act Now !
    please share the petition with your friends

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