Sierra Club is one of the plaintiffs.--Tom
 
In a message dated 5/7/2013 5:52:34 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

http://modernfarmer.com/2013/05/can-a-lawsuit-save-americas-bees/
(edited)


Steve Ellis  and a handful of other beekeepers from around the  country are 
teaming up with some of the most powerful and sophisticated  environmental 
groups in the U.S.


They're plaintiffs in a lawsuit, Ellis v. Bradbury (read the complaint 
_here_ (http://www.scribd.com/collections/4246349/Ellis-v-Bradbury) ),  against 
the EPA to stop the use of two pesticides that Ellis and other  beekeepers 
believe are killing their bee colonies. The suit not only attempts  to 
eliminate the use of neonicotinoid pesticides containing the ingredients  
clothianidin and thiamethoxam, which damage the central nervous system of  insects, 
but to challenge the way the EPA approves pesticides.


If they win, it could change the way pesticides hit the market. If they  
lose, Ellis and the others believe it could be the end of beekeeping as we  
know it.


They are far from alone in their concerns-the European Union _voted  in 
late April to temporarily ban some neonicotinoids_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/30/business/global/30iht-eubees30.html) , including those  fingered in 
the suit, for two years because of their detrimental effect on  honeybees.

"We're right on the edge of losing it, and we need help right now," says  
Ellis.

To that end, the beekeepers set out to find allies. They include  nonprofit 
advocacy groups such as the _Center for Food Safety_ 
(http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/) , _Beyond Pesticides_ (http://www.beyondpesticides.org/) , 
_the Sierra  Club_ (http://www.sierraclub.org/) , _Pesticide Action Network 
North America_ (http://www.panna.org/) , and  the _Center for  Environmental 
Health_ (http://www.ceh.org/)  who collectively filed the suit (as well as 
three  other beekeepers) in federal court in late March. The EPA has until 
mid-May to  respond.

The dire situation has garnered international attention and at stake is  
not only the fate of honeybees and the ecosystems that depend on them for  
pollination, but perhaps more tellingly the farmers who require the hives of  
commercial beekeepers to pollinate their crops, including almonds, stone  
fruits, avocados, apples, and carrots.


Ellis and the environmental groups believe that clothianidin and  thiamet
hoxam - insecticides applied to dozens of crops spread over more than  100 
million acres by farmers seeking to protect their yields from a variety of  
insects - are in large part to blame for colony collapse disorder. They say  
that their bees become contaminated with the nerve agents while foraging  
nectar from the treated crops.


As to why the EPA has been slow to name pesticides as the primary  culprit, 
Ellis says, "They seem more interested in getting products registered  
quickly, than doing work to protect the environment from the result of those  
products."


Ultimately, if a person or group has a beef with a pesticide, they must  
take it to the EPA's doorstep. The _Federal Insecticide, Fungicide  and 
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)_ (http://www.epa.gov/agriculture/lfra.html)  tasks the 
agency with regulating the use and  sale of pesticides to protect humans and 
the environment. But when it comes to  putting pesticides on the market, the 
EPA can "conditionally" greenlight  products. That means they OK a pesticide 
for use with the understanding that  additional scientific data is needed 
before final registration can be  approved. And that process, the lawsuit 
says, has been abused.



According to the complaint, thiamethoxam and clothianidin were  
conditionally registered in 2000 and 2003 respectively. There are no set  deadlines for 
conditionally registered products to be reviewed, and more than  a decade 
later, the requirement for basic scientific studies on the impact of  the 
insecticides has gone unmet. Among the outstanding studies, the complaint  says 
that EPA hasn't fulfilled its stated requirement to "complete an adequate  
life cycle study, and evaluation of exposure and effect to the queen  bee."


"They have remained conditionally registered for 10 years without  adequate 
information," says Peter Jenkins, lead counsel on the suit for the  Center 
for Food Safety. "That wasn't what Congress intended, and we think  that's a 
compelling argument to make before a judge."


The suit also argues that the EPA has denied that certain uses of  
clothianidin pose an "imminent hazard" to honey bees and made this final  
determination without considering new data about bee kills. It also claims  that the 
EPA repeatedly failed to publically announce new or changed uses of  the 
pesticides. And this could provide some relief for beekeepers. When it was  
found in recent similar cases that the EPA failed to meet public notice  
requirements, those pesticide registrations were in part withdrawn.

For many watching the case from the sidelines, of great interest is how  
the EPA will weigh its legal obligations. When the EPA registers a pesticide,  
it must balance the risks and benefits the chemical poses to the national 
food  supply. Given that on the one hand neonicotinoids are used on corn, 
cereals,  and sugar beets (among other major agricultural crops), and on the 
other that  one-third of U.S. crops depend on pollinators, the stakes are 
enormous.


"I'm not familiar with another case where there would be anywhere near  
that large of an economic impact on both sides of equation," says former EPA  
attorney Tom Boer, who is now with the environmental defense law firm Barg  
Coffin Lewis and Trapp.





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