British science journalist and author Matt Ridley (best known for his writings on science, the environment, and economics) has penned an op-ed published in The Times of London exposing the inanity and perverse consequences of the EU’s pet theory, The Precautionary Principle. Although some variants are less destructive and irresponsible than others, the main thrust of the PP asserts that any advance or innovation in technology must be measured against the “perfect,” or the 100 percent “safe,” no matter the effects of restricting such progress. In essence, if applied assiduously, the PP would bring all scientific — indeed all — progress to a screeching halt, as no new method is guaranteed completely without risk. And even that risk can be generated not by actual evidence, or even likelihood, but by mere concern or supposition (or, all-too-often, politics or agenda)......
Here’s just a sample of the Ridley piece, but the
entirety should be required reading:
The Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) report on the subject concluded
that lab studies used to justify the EU ban severely overdosed their bees and
that bees are not affected by neonics under normal conditions. Australian
regulators claim that neonics have actually improved the environment for bees
by replacing older pesticides. And in the US, the Department of Agriculture and
the Environmental Protection Agency have so far resisted calls to ban neonics
for much the same reason.
Even though there was
literally no good science linking neonics to bee deaths in fields, they were
banned anyway for use on flowering crops in Europe. Friends of the Earth, which
lobbied for the ban, opined that this would make no difference to farmers.
Well, the environmentalists were wrong. The loss of the [rapeseed/canola] crop
this autumn is approaching 50 percent….Farmers in Germany, the EU’s largest
producer, are also reporting widespread damage.
The ban was brought in
entirely to placate green lobby groups, which have privileged and direct access
to unelected European officials in policymaking. They hotted up their
followers, using the misleading lab studies, to bombard politicians on the
topic. The former health commissioner…felt so inundated by emails that he had
to do something…Yet he warned colleagues that a ban was unjustified and would
be counterproductive. He was right.
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