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FARMING

Syngenta chief calls for debate on ‘sustainable agriculture’

Swiss agrochemicals giant Syngenta, recently taken over by ChemChina, said there should be a wide-scale debate on what constitutes "sustainable agriculture" in face of a number of current controversies over pesticides.

Syngenta chief calls for debate on 'sustainable agriculture'
There has been a renewed focus on the use of pesticides in the light of a declining bee population. Photo: PHILIPPE HUGUEN / AFP
“We have a lot of discussions about specific products. I think it's really important to step back and have a real discussion with the government, and with NGOs and academics about what is a sustainable agriculture,” Syngenta chief executive Eryk Fyrwald told AFP in an interview.
 
Neonicotinoid pesticides are widely used in agriculture, but recent studies have suggested a strong link with declining bee populations, especially over the last decade.
 
Fyrwald said he agreed with the definition of sustainable agriculture recently put forward by French minister Stephane Travert.
 
“The objective is to have affordable food with tools that are safe for the farmers, for consumers, and good for environment,” he said.
 
In a recent debate with environment minister Nicolas Hulot, Travert had said he was open to the use of neonicotinoid pesticides — one of which is manufactured by Syngenta — to protect crops where there are currently no alternatives in order to maximise yields.
 
“We have to feed the planet and we have to pay attention to the environment and to the safety of farmers and consumers,” he said, calling for “honest and open” discussions between NGOs and the industry, instead of debates that were politicised and unscientific. Fyrwald suggested neonicotinoid pesticides were not as dangerous as was being suggested.
 
While France has confirmed its plans to ban the products from 2018 and the EU Commission will debate the matter in the autumn, the Syngenta chief said that “when you look at the data, we believe pesticides have very little impact on bees, on the health of bee colonies.”
 
Other factors affected bee health, such as varroa mites, diseases and cold weather, he argued.
 
“It's important to understand that we produce a lot of seeds, and our seeds require bees to pollinate the crops, so we have high value for bees. Without bees our business would not exist,” Fyrwald said.
 
Syngenta has 100,000 beehives, including 10,000 in France.
 
Pesticides in organic food
 
Fyrwald said that no declines in bee colony health was seen where its thiametoxam pesticide, marketed under the brandname Cruiser, was used. While Syngenta also makes organic pesticides and fertilizers, Fyrwald fired off some criticism at the organic sector, saying it uses “more land… more water and makes more (greenhouse gases) per unit of food, because it's lower yield.”
 
“Why don't NGOs look at organic pesticides and decide which ones are good and which ones are bad? Why are they not examined?,” he asked.
 
Fyrwald questioned the use of copper, for example, as a fungicide in organic farming.
 
“Copper is a heavy metal. You put a lot of metal in the soil, is that good for the soil? Is that good for the consumer? For the farmer? I don't know,” the CEO said.
 
“All I am saying is that the regulators have to look at all technologies and decide what is really sustainable.”
 
Following its takeover by ChemChina, the combined Swiss-Chinese group will rank third worldwide in the agrochemicals sector behind two other giants currently in the process of being created from the mergers of Bayer and Monsanto, and Dow and Dupont.
 
In order to catch up with the other two, Syngenta was “very interested in making acquisitions in seeds” all over the world, the CEO said. But he declined to name any possible takeover targets.
 
Regarding the advent of Syngenta's new Chinese owners, Fyrwald said there was no noticeable difference in corporate governance, aside from the appointment of two ChemChina officials to the supervisory board.
 
“The Chinese want us to perform well but they are not quarterly focused. We call it the long view. It's fantastic,” he said.
 
“I believe ChemChina bought us with full support of Chinese government because they are very interested in making sure that the Chinese people have plenty of food,” he said.
 
And there was plenty of room to grow in China.
 
“We have a business in China which is smaller than in France, and we plan to double our sales within the next five years, which are of the order of 300 million euros right now,” Fyrwald said.
 
By AFP's Isabel Malsang

FARMING

Farmers dump sheep killed by wolves in front of Swiss government building

Swiss sheep farmers on Saturday dumped the bodies of animals killed by wolves in front of a regional government building, demanding more action against the predators, Swiss media reported.

Farmers dump sheep killed by wolves in front of Swiss government building

Around a dozen breeders came from the Saint-Barthelemy area in the western Swiss canton of Vaud to lay out the carcasses of 12 sheep in front of the regional government headquarters in Lausanne, the Chateau Saint-Maire.

“These sheep were killed last night,” Eric Herb, a member of a Swiss association demanding the regulation of big predators, was quoted as saying by the Keystone-ATS news agency.

“It is really time to act.”

“We are sick of this. We want the wolf killed,” agreed Patrick Perroud, a farmer and butcher from the nearby municipality of Oulens.

“Cohabitation is not possible. Our territory is too small,” he told Keystone-ATS.

The protesters told the news agency that wolves had killed 17 sheep in the same area late last month, two earlier this week and 13 overnight to Saturday.

“The breeders have played nice until now, but this time it was too much,” Herb said.

The protesters were planning to increase the pressure on the Vaud government environment minister, Vassilis Venizelos of the Green Party, he said.

One of the protesters’ banners read: “Vassilis step down”, Keystone-ATS reported.

The breeders had briefly negotiated with regional police before being allowed to lay down the animal carcasses on tarpaulin in front of the Chateau.

Participants in the protest, which was supported by the regional chapter of the far-right Swiss People’s Party — Switzerland’s largest party — lamented that they were losing sleep.

“We have to check on our animals every night,” one was quoted as saying.

After being wiped out more than a century ago, wolves have in recent decades begun returning to Switzerland and to several other European countries.

Since the first pack was spotted in the wealthy Alpine nation in 2012, the number of packs swelled to 32 last year, with around 300 individual wolves counted.

Nature conservation groups have hailed the return as a sign of a healthier and more diverse ecosystem.

But breeders and herders complain of attacks on livestock and have been ramping up demands to cull more wolves.

Swiss authorities last year relaxed the rules for hunting the protected species, and decided to allow large preventative culls in the most affected cantons but swift legal actions put those plans partially on ice.

The debate in several parts of Europe about wolves rose up the political agenda in September.

In an open letter to the European Commission, eight leading conservation groups said there were ways to make coexistence easier between humans and large wild animals like wolves.

“Damage to livestock is often linked to the lack of adequate supervision and/or physical protection,” they said. They pointed to strategies such as “the training of dogs to protect herds, education of herders, tools and technical solutions to deter wolves”.

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