A hundred people formed a funeral procession on Saturday March 4 in Paris to denounce, at the call of scientists, the “catastrophic consequences of the massive use of pesticides and to promote another agricultural model”, noted a photographer from the Agency. France-Presse.
The Scientific Rebellion and Extinction Rebellion associations organized this procession at the Jardin des Plantes, in front of the National Museum of Natural History, under the banner “Silent Spring: Pesticides Kill”.
The action, organized in parallel with the Agricultural Show, refers to the book Silent Spring, by the North American biologist Rachel Carson, the first whistleblower in 1962 on the dangerousness of synthetic pesticides, according to the press release from the associations. . The NGOs Pollinis, Future Generations, Avenir Santé Environnement and Alert des médecins sur les pesticides took part in the event.
« Blazing kick »
Activists took the floor, while others lay down on the ground, to the rhythm of gongs. Artists, “dressed in red to symbolize the blood of extinct species, strolled among participants dressed in black and scientists in white coats,” the statement said.
“Scientific studies show a drastic drop in the abundance of insects, including certain pollinators, which has reached 60 to 80% in Europe over the past thirty years, as well as a massive decline of 30% in the populations of birds in agricultural habitats in thirty years in France,” said Benoît Fontaine, ornithologist member of Scientists in Rebellion, quoted in the press release.
After recent restrictions on the use of pesticides which are of concern to farmers, Emmanuel Macron announced on Saturday at the Agricultural Show the launch of a new plan aimed in particular at coordinating the action of France with that of the European Union. .
France intends to reduce the use of synthetic pesticides by 50% by 2025. Many farmers believe that the range of pesticides (insecticides, fungicides or herbicides) authorized has been excessively reduced in recent years, leaving them faced with “dead ends”.
A European court decision has forced France to abandon the exemptions granted to beet growers on neonicotinoids, which are toxic to bees.