European citizens are highly concerned about the use of pesticides and its effect on health and the environment. This is shown in a survey in six member states of the European Union – Denmark, France, Germany, Poland, Romania and Spain. The survey was conducted by the European Public Affairs team of the market research agency Ipsos and published by the Pesticides Action Network (PAN) Europe.
The impact of pesticides on respondents’ and their families’ health worries 75.9% of respondents. Respondents in Poland and Romania expressed the highest level of concern about the health impact of pesticides (80.4% and 84.1% respectively), while those in Denmark and Germany showed a somewhat lower level of concern (62% and 69.8% respectively).
As many as 81.8% of respondents are concerned about the environmental impact of pesticide use with modest divergence across the six member-states included in the survey. 77.7% of respondents agree that the use of pesticides is harming the environment, with the highest agreement in France (82.5%) and Poland (80.3%).
The survey participants expressed different levels of trust in national governments to prioritise people’s health and the environment when deciding on the use of pesticides. Those in Spain and Denmark expressed the highest levels of trust. In contrast, around half of Romanians (50,3) do not trust their government to protect them against pesticides. This number is 46,7% in France and 44,8% in Poland.
The poll finds opposition to gambling with pesticides. The participants in the survey expressed a strong preference for a precautionary approach, instead. Three in five (59,0%) respondents agree that farmers should always use methods of preventing or controlling pests and diseases that carry the least risks for human health and the environment or else lose access to EU financial support. As many as 73,2% of respondents are in favour of making Integrated Pest Management rules – IPM (1) mandatory for farmers in the EU.
Further, the most preferred buffer zones between areas where pesticides are used and sensitive areas, such as schools, kindergartens, hospitals, elderly homes, nature-protected areas and water bodies are also the largest options offered by the survey, namely 1,000 meters and 3,000 meters.
As many as 85,3% of respondents in the countries polled are in favour of halting the use of a specific pesticide if new scientific evidence emerges indicating that a particular pesticide may cause harm to human health and/or the environment – until more is known.
The majority of respondents (61.9%) believe that glyphosate, the most widely used herbicide in the EU, should be banned in the EU, with the figure rising to 70.5% in France and 68.3% in Germany.
Dr Martin Dermine, Executive Director of the Pesticides Action Network (PAN) Europe, said: “European citizens don’t want to take risks when it comes to their food, their health and the environment. These results are a clear call to policymakers to reduce pesticide use and to be much stricter in authorising pesticides”.