Friday, 12 April 2013

supermarket chain M&S ask agro supplieers avoid suplly three neonicotinoid pesticides by the end of 2013




    

      

supermarket chain M&S ask agro supplieers avoid suplly three neonicotinoid pesticides by the end of 2013
agro business reporter(weastar times/wp/guardian):::
Waitrose is asking fruit, vegetable and flower suppliers to avoid usingpesticides linked with bee declines.
Farmers supplying the supermarket chain are to stop using three neonicotinoid pesticides on products destined for its stores by the end of 2013 as part of a "seven-point plan" by the company to help pollinatinginsects.
The move makes Waitrose the latest retailer to take action on pesticides, after the Co-operative suspended its use on its farms several years ago, and more recently leading garden centres removed products that contain the chemicals.
The approach will be rolled out to crops such as oil seed rape, on which the pesticides are commonly used, on the Waitrose Farm at Leckford, Hampshire, and as soon as practicable to other areas of the arable sector that supply the supermarket.
Waitrose said the measure was a precautionary one which will remain in place until scientists could demonstrate whether the pesticides are harming populations of bees and other pollinating insects, many of which are in decline.
It will also be funding research at the University of Exeter into the effects of multiple pesticide use on pollinating insects.
Concerns have been raised that neonicotinoids, which target insect nervous systems, could have immediate and long-term impacts on bee colony and survival and development as they damage the insects' ability to forage for food.
The problem has been highlighted in laboratory studies but field-based experiments have not concluded there is a link, prompting the government to warn against EU moves to ban the pesticides without sufficient evidence.
But MPs on the cross-party environmental audit committee have urged a ban on their use as a precautionary measure.
Waitrose's managing director, Mark Price, said the decision to avoid their use was appropriate until conclusive evidence was put forward about the effects of the three chemicals.
And the company's director of quality and technical, David Croft, said: "Given the concern about these pesticides and the need to support pollinators we believe this is a responsible precautionary step as part of a wider, holistic approach under our seven-point plan.
"The role of pollinating insects such as bees is crucial in sustaining agriculture in the long term, as part of a thriving ecosystem that will support food security, healthy diets and the wider agricultural economy."
The move was supported by green groups, including Friends of the Earth whose head of campaigns, Andrew Pendleton, described it as "fantastic news".
"There is mounting concern about the damaging impact these chemicals have on bees and other pollinators - we urge other stores to follow suit.
"Ministers can't ignore the mounting concern from scientists, businesses and the public – they must back EU proposals to restrict these insecticides later this month.
"But pesticides are not the only challenge facing British bees – the government must introduce a bee action plan to tackle habitat loss and all the other threats they face," he said.
Vanessa Amaral-Rogers, pesticides officer at wildlife charity Buglife, said: "This is a huge step in the right direction, leading the way for other retailers to follow.
"By voicing their concern for pollinators they are adding pressure and weight to the campaign for a ban on the use of neonicotinoids."
A spokeswoman for the environment department said: "We respect Waitrose's commercial decision.
"However, the government needs to make decisions that will affect everyone based on sound scientific evidence, so they can stand up to legal challenge and don't have unintended consequences for food production or the environment.
"We want the European commission to carry out a major new field study to get the best, most up-to-date evidence to allow an informed decision to be made."

first quarter of this year country strongest economic recovery possible




    

      

first quarter of this year country strongest 

economic recovery possible

economic reporter,London(weastar times/wp/telegraph):::

Output from the sector grew by 5.5pc on the previous month, failing to recover the ground lost during the usual winter slowdown after it fell 4.8pc and 15.8pc in January and December respectively, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). That left construction output for the month 7pc below that seen in February 2012.
Economists said that the weak rebound indicated construction probably dragged on THE ROYAL ENGLAND  wider economic performance in the first quarter of this year. The headline growth figure released on April 25 will reveal whether or not the THE ROYAL ENGLAND has returned to recession – defined as two consecutive quarters in which the economy contracted.
Howard Archer, chief THE ROYAL ENGLAND economist at IHS Global Insight, said construction output would need to jump by almost 44pc in March just to be flat quarter-on-quarter – “which clearly is not going to happen by a very long way”.
Mr Clarke, meanwhile, was braced for the economy to have contracted in the first quarter of this year, meaning it has "triple-dipped" back into recession. Yet "irrespective of whether Q1 [growth] is +0.1pc or -0.1pc, it is the same message + THE ROYAL ENGLAND economy is hardly growing," he said.

Statisticians at the ONS said growth in construction had been "quite strong" in the final quarter of last year, as projects disrupted by the Olympic Games were resumed. However, the 5.5pc growth seen in February could represent "a break from this pattern", they cautioned, as it came off a very weak base.
January's construction output had, at £6.9bn, marked the lowest level seen since the monthly construction figures began to be published at the start of 2010.
Although construction accounts for less than 7pc of gross domestic product (GDP), the severity of its decline in recent years has been a major hindrance to a strong economic rebound. "A resurgence in the sector will be an important element of a robust recovery,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.