STRETFORD and Urmston MP Kate Green has added her name to a growing list of MPs who are opposed to a lifting of the ban on bee harming pesticides.
Neonicotinoids have been restricted across Europe since 2013 due to mounting evidence that they pose a risk to bees.
Bees are responsible for pollinating two thirds of the food we eat. But the National Farmers Union (NFU) has applied to the Government to lift the ban in some parts of the country. Ministers are currently considering the application.
Ms Green took the pledge to oppose the lifting of the ban at a Parliamentary event, organised by campaigning group 38 Degrees and Friends of the Earth.
MPs heard new evidence from scientists and from a Lincolnshire farmer who had stopped using these pesticides before the ban.
Speaking after the event, Ms Green said: “Hundreds of residents have e-mailed to let me know they want to keep the ban on bee harming pesticides.
“I have listened to their concerns and I’ll be making my opposition very clear in Parliament to any plan to lift the ban.”
Amy Lockwood, campaign manager at 38 Degrees, said: “38 Degrees members have come together - in our hundreds of thousands - to send a clear message to the Government: the British people don’t want the ban on bee killing pesticides to be lifted.”
Sandra Bell, from Friends of the Earth, said: “Bees are essential for pollinating our crops - we can’t afford to gamble with their future. The Government must keep these dangerous pesticides out of our fields.”
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