Potato growers told to plan ahead in light of new pesticide regulations

POTATO growers have been told that changes to the EU Directive (91/414) governing pesticide use could have been a lot worse, but the industry still needs to plan ahead and embrace integrated pest and farm management.

Speaking at a Branston technical meeting, David Payne, senior registration manager for Syngenta Crop Protection said that while there was cause for optimism, the changes to legislation would still have a significant impact in the UK.

“We initially thought that if a pesticide triggered one criteria, it would be banned,” explained Mr Payne.

“However, the revision 91/414 sees pesticides banned if they trigger two out of three criteria. At one point it looked like we would lose about 85 per cent of the 267 agricultural pesticides on the EU approved list, but this will not be the case.”

Chairing the meeting, Dr Andy Barker, R&D manager at Branston, echoed Mr Payne’s sentiments but also urged growers to become more proactive in terms of adopting a forward-thinking approach to pest and disease control in light of the new regulations.

“All of us should start implementing and exploring alternative pest and disease control given the introduction of the new EU regulation.

“As no one knows what the future holds, we need to start planning further ahead than we have previously been used to. Reactive management simply isn’t sustainable,” said Dr. Barker.

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