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For the second time in two years, Gildardo Urrego is scooping up piles of dead bees after an invisible evil invaded his hives in northwest Colombia, wreaking havoc among his swarms.
Urrego has no proof, but he suspects the culprit is pesticides which have been fueling a commercial avocado and citrus boom in the country.
<p>Hundreds of hives have been killed off in Colombia in recent years, and some investigations have pointed to fipronil, an insecticide banned for use on crops in Europe and restricted in the United States and China.</p><p>It is used to control all manner of insects, including ants and ticks, and has been blamed for several bee massacres around the world.</p><p>Urrego's apiary in Colombia's Antioquia Department produces honey flavored with pollen from nearby passion fruit orchards. In 2019, he lost 10 of his 19 hives.</p><p>This time, he said, a third of his 12 hives were wiped out -- a loss of some 160,000 of the industrious little pollinators.</p><p>"There is a theory that, yes, this is due to poisoning, there are some crops around here that perhaps have not managed their agrochemicals well and so this area was affected," he told AFP.</p><p>In recent years, bees in North America, Europe, Russia, South America and elsewhere have started dying off from "colony collapse disorder," a mysterious scourge blamed partly on pesticides along with mites, viruses and fungi.</p><p>The UN warns that nearly half of insect pollinators, particularly bees and butterflies, risk global extinction.</p><p>- Free fertilization -</p><p>About 1.4 billion jobs and three-quarters of all crops around the world, according to a 2016 study, depend on pollinators, mainly bees, which provide free fertilization services worth billions of dollars.</p><p>Some 300 kilometers (186 miles) south of Antioquia, in the Quindio Department, Abdon Salazar has no qualms pointing the finger at fipronil as he counts his losses.</p><p>"Over the last two years, we have calculated more than 80 million dead bees," he said as he walked among the 300 vibrating hives of his business Apicola Oro (Golden Beekeeping).</p><p>"We are talking some 800 hives, 100,000 bees per hive, it is a very large quantity, an alarming quantity."</p><p>Salazar and other beekeepers in the region are increasingly having to clear out mounds of dead bees from their apiaries which are surrounded by avocado and citrus plantations in an exceptionally fertile and biodiverse part of the world.</p><p>- Toxic neighbors -</p><p>In Quindio, hive collapse has coincided with the expansion of monoculture in recent decades, according to Faber Sabogal, president of the Asoproabejas beekeepers' organization.</p><p>According to the local government, five multinational companies bought large tracts of land in the region between 2016 and 2019 to profit from the growing global appetite for Hass avocados.</p><p>Exports skyrocketed from 1.7 tons in 2014 to 44.5 tons in 2019, and this year, Colombia became the largest supplier of the creamy, green delicacy to Europe.</p><p>But bees are the collateral damage, becoming contaminated as they buzz through pesticide-treated plantations looking for food, say beekeepers.</p><p>"They bring this poison to the hive and kill everyone else," said Salazar.</p><p>- Economic impediments -</p><p>Asoproabejas members have videotaped dozens of mass bee die-offs in several regions of Colombia, mainly in the west.</p><p>Last year, the state-owned Colombian Agricultural Institute (ICA) was notified by beekeepers of 256 suspected hive poisonings in Quindio alone.</p><p>Some 10 million insects were lost.</p><p>ICA regional manager Jorge Garcia said the body examined samples from six apiaries and found that "the fipronil molecule is one of the causes of mortality."</p><p>The alert was raised with ICA headquarters in Bogota, which is working on a suspension order, he told AFP.</p><p>Withdrawing the poison altogether has been difficult "because the companies producing agrochemicals will be affected economically," said Salazar.</p><p>- Competing interests -</p><p>Maria Latorre, spokeswoman for Colombia's agrochemical union, said a fipronil ban would provoke "a very negative situation for the productive structure" of the 33 crops that rely on it.</p><p>The body denies that fipronil is harmful to bees, but said it would welcome a "review" of its use "on crops that have had incidents."</p><p>But Fernando Montoya of the Colombian Hortofruticola Association, which represents crop growers, said the chemical could be replaced by "mushroom-based bioproducts," insect traps and manual pest removal.</p><p>The ICA has denied any link between the expansion of avocado crops in Quindio and the recent decimation of bees.</p><p>But rather than risk losing it all, Apicola Oro, which produces some 36 tons of honey a year, decided to pack up and leave.</p><p>He has managed to save his business for now, but worries about the future.</p><p>"The bee is a bioindicator. If bees are dying, what other insects beneficial to the environment... are dying?".</p><p>© 2021 AFP</p>
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The US city of Miami is to invest billions of dollars to tackle its vulnerability to rising sea levels, a reality that already affects the daily lives of residents used to constant flooding.
Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine-Cava said Friday she will protect communities hardest hit by rising sea levels, which eat away at beaches and leave residents particularly vulnerable to flooding during hurricane season.
<p>"We must continue to focus on restoration, preservation and protection of this sacred space," she told a news conference.</p><p>"And so we will be together investing billions of dollars... in our infrastructure so that we can lift this community and others that are so affected by sea level rise," she added.</p><p>She cited "adaptation action areas" as a first priority to be studied, which would include raising low-lying roads, and waterproofing and converting southern Florida's widely used septic tanks into sewage systems.</p><p>The area, with extensive wetlands and sitting on porous stone that acts like a sponge, makes the state one of the most at risk from rising sea levels.</p><p>The problem is so visible that, during the summer rainy season, it is common to see Miamians kayaking along flooded avenues and cars sunk up to their windows.</p><p>The city of Miami Beach -- which is part of Miami-Dade County -- invested millions of dollars in raising the level of many of its streets in 2016.</p><p>And some private entrepreneurs have proposed creative, if expensive, ways to adapt to the challenge.</p><p>For example, Miami residents are used to seeing a houseboat that often docks near the port, although it has also appeared in other waters around Biscayne Bay.</p><p>It is valued at $5.5 million and adjusts to rising sea levels.</p><p>"It looks like a house, but technically it's a boat," said Nicolas Derouin, co-founder and managing director of Arkup, the Miami-based company that created this floating "villa" with a drop-down terrace over the sea.</p><p>The house, covered with a roof of solar panels, remains stable thanks to four hydraulic pillars that fix it to an underwater bed.</p><p>The Environmental Protection Agency says the sea level could rise by 30am to 120 cm over the coming century.</p><p>© 2021 AFP</p>
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President Joe Biden on Friday toured relief efforts in Houston after an unusually severe winter storm pummeled Texas, driving the state's power grid to the brink of collapse.
"Hell of an operation here. It's probably the best one in the country," Biden told staff at the Emergency Operations Center in Houston. "You're saving people's lives. As my mother would say, you're doing God's work."
<p>Biden, accompanied by his wife Jill, was visiting for the first time since a prolonged freeze plunged Texas into chaos, with the power grid unable to keep up and Texans, far more used to heat than cold, struggling to survive.</p><p>Millions in the solidly Republican state lost power and reliable water. Mark Sloan, emergency management coordinator for Harris County, said "57,000 residents still have to boil their water" for safety. </p><p>Biden and the first lady also stopped at the giant Houston Food Bank, which serves more than a million people across south-east Texas.</p><p>Jill Biden helped pack boxes with instant oats and canned peaches, saying: "We're here to help, so put us to work!"</p><p>The president was later to visit a federal Covid-19 vaccination center to promote the government's bid to speed up a national vaccine rollout against the pandemic. The center is able to administer 6,000 shots a day.</p>
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