Biloute wrote: ↑Wed Aug 13, 2025 7:24 am I'm not an expert on pesticides and insecticides, so I won't judge whether neonicotinoids, including acetamiprid, can be used or not.
However, I note the following curious facts:
- The beets aren't flowering when the products are used: so, what danger is there for bees?
- Acetamiprid is authorized throughout the EU except France: is it only dangerous here?
- Will France ban imports of all plants grown with acetamiprid? And if so, will the EU accept this?
- The Duplomb Law was passed by Parliament, in the name of the people, since its members were democratically elected. Does it make sense for the Constitutional Council, whose members are not elected, to overturn a law passed by the people's elected representatives? If so, we should abolish Parliament and we'll save a lot of money!
Clearly you are not, as you say, an expert.
Acetamiprid is a systemic insecticide. This means it is absorbed by the plant and remains active there.
There is therefore a danger to bees when they arrive at a treated plant - and all of the other insects involved in pollination.
And as a matter of interest, do you feel happy using sugar that might contain traces of insecticide?
These extracts from Wiki:
Studies (in Europe, China, and Japan) have established a link between acetamiprid and neurodevelopmental disorders in mammals. In a statement from May 2024, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) stated that "there are major uncertainties for the developmental neurotoxicity properties (toxicity affecting brain development) of acetamiprid and, therefore, further data are needed to achieve a more robust mechanistic understanding that would enable a proper hazard and risk assessment.
In Europe Acetamiprid is not considered persistent in soil but persistent in water. It is considered highly toxic for aquatic organisms.
So run off is going to poison our rivers - which incidentally are often our sources for drinking water.
A recent study has implicated acetamiprid as a cause of erectile dysfunction in human males and may be implicated in the problem of declining human fertility, and called into question its safety, particularly where its use may be subject to abuse
Still think banning it is a bad idea?
Still think it is a good way to produce cheap sugar so we can all get overweight?
