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France allows farmers to use more pesticides in order to protect sugar production

The French deputy minister of agriculture announced on Friday that farmers in France will be allowed to use more pesticides this year on their sugar beet crops due to the high risk of an insect spreading a disease which devastated crops in 2020.

Yellows disease caused a 26% drop in French sugar production in 2020. The government then allowed sugar beet farmers to use neonicotinoids, a pesticide banned in the European Union due to its risk to bees.

Farmers and scientists claim that alternatives to the pesticide as effective as France's exemptions are still not available.

Agnes Pannier Runacher, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, said on France Bleu Nord radio that a mild winter increases the risk of aphids spreading and causing yellows disease in sugar beets.

"Beet sugar is what we import, and we won't do that unless we find a solution for the farmers."

She said that beet growers can now apply up to five applications per year of Spirotetramat (developed by Bayer CropScience and sold under the Movento brand) instead of the two applications currently allowed.

The farm ministry announced separately that the pesticide Teppeki, based on flonicamid, is also being used by ISK Bioscience and has been for many years.

Sugar prices are expected to encourage farmers to plant more sugar beets in France this year. (Reporting and editing by Devika Syamnath; Sybille de la Hamaide)

(source: Reuters)