EU risks a crisis if it fails to halt pollinator loss, researchers warn
A new white paper from eight major EU-funded pollinator projects warns that the resilience of Europe's vital societal functions and food security are at stake if the EU fails to halt and reverse wild
A new white paper from eight major EU-funded pollinator projects warns that the resilience of Europe's vital societal functions and food security are
Read Full Story at Phys.org โWhy This Matters
The decline of pollinators isn't just an environmental issueโit's a direct threat to the EU's economic stability and public health. Nearly 80% of European crops depend on animal pollination, making this a cornerstone of food security that could destabilize supply chains if left unaddressed.
Background Context
The EU's biodiversity strategy aims to reverse pollinator decline by 2030, but progress has been uneven across member states. Decades of intensive agriculture, pesticide use, and habitat fragmentation have created a silent crisis, with wild bee populations in some regions dropping by over 50% since the 1980s.
What Happens Next
Pressure will mount on the European Commission to fast-track legally binding measures, likely targeting neonicotinoid pesticides and expanding protected habitats. Failure to act could trigger food price spikes, rural unemployment, and even geopolitical tensions over agricultural trade.
Bigger Picture
This crisis reflects a growing pattern where short-term economic gains are undermining long-term ecological resilience. As climate change intensifies, pollinator-dependent ecosystems face cascading collapses, forcing policymakers to confront the limits of current sustainability frameworks.
