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France to allow farmers more pesticide to protect sugar output

French sugar beet farmers will be permitted to use more pesticide this year due to a high risk of attacks from an insect bring a disease that damaged crops in 2020, France's deputy farming minister stated on Friday.

Environment group Greenpeace voiced its opposition to the usage of more possibly hazardous pesticide while beet growers stated the move was inadequate and required other items to be approved.

Beet growers will be allowed five applications of Spirotetramat, established by Bayer CropScience under the brand Movento, up from two currently, with three applications enabled at first and 2 more if required, Deputy Agriculture Minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher told France Bleu Nord radio.

This remains in addition to ISK Bioscience's flonicamid-based pesticide Teppeki, which has actually been in use for years, the farm ministry said independently.

With a moderate winter, we have a very high risk of aphids increasing and for that reason of yellows illness on sugar beets, Pannier-Runacher said.

Beet is sugar We are not going to import more sugar. without taking care of this risk, so our goal is to offer services to farmers.

Beet yellows is transferred by aphids and can trigger serious yield losses.

A break out of it in 2020 led to a 26% fall in French sugar output, prompting the federal government to permit sugar beet growers to utilize a pesticide called neonicotinoids prohibited in the European Union over risks to bees.

France needed to drop that exemption in 2015 after an EU court stated it was unlawful, but farmers and scientists state alternatives as effective are not all set yet.

It is excellent news but the products that are proposed are not efficient enough, understanding that we are broaching a risk similar to that of 2020, Franck Sander, chairman of French sugar beet growers group CGB, informed .

CGB asked the federal government to authorize the use of acetamiprid, a neonicotinoid used on leaves, and flupyradifurone. The 2 pesticides are authorized by the EU but banned in France.

Greenpeace said Movento was thought by the EU to be hazardous for animals and noted that there was no proof that 5 applications of the pesticide were not poisonous for plants and people.

France's sugar beet area is expected to rebound somewhat this year, after a 6% drop to a 14-year low in 2023, as farmers are encouraged by high sugar rates.

(source: Reuters)