Defra breached law when it let farmers use bee-killing pesticide, watchdog says
The Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) has found that the UK government breached environmental law on four occasions when granting emergency authorisations for a bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticide. In 2023 and 2024, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) allowed farmers to use the banned pesticide on sugar beet crops.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) has found that the UK government breached environmental law on four occasions when granting emergency authorisations for a bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticide. In 2023 and 2024, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) allowed farmers to use the banned pesticide on sugar beet crops. The OEP's investigation, prompted by a complaint from ClientEarth, revealed Defra failed to consider the pesticide's impact on protected sites and mitigate known risks. In response, Defra has pledged to update its assessment process for emergency authorisations to include protected sites, with the new process expected by November 2026. The government has also committed to banning emergency authorisations for three banned neonicotinoids.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe OEP found failures to comply with environmental law on four occasions, including impact on protected sites.
Defra breached environmental law on several occasions when granting farmers permission to use a bee-killing pesticide.
Defra has proposed to update the assessment process for granting emergency authorisations.
The government has pledged to ban emergency authorisations for three banned neonicotinoids.
One teaspoon of thiamethoxam is enough to kill 1.25bn honeybees.