Next Level Articles Homepage.
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 31      
Categories

Accessories
Arts
Business
Career
Cars and Trucks
CGI
Christianity
Coding Sites
Computers
Computers and Technology
Cooking
Crafts
Current Affairs
Databases
Entertainment
Film
Finances
Gardening
Healthy Living
Holidays
Home
Home Management
Internet
Medical
Medical Business
Men Only
Motorcyles
Our Pets
Outdoors
Relationships
Religion
Self Help
Self Improvement
Society
Sports
Staying Fit
Technology
Travel
Web Design
Weddings
Women Only
Womens Interest
World Affairs
Writing
 
Stats
Total Articles: 30
Total Authors: 104482
Total Downloads: 2380419


Newest Member
James Geto

 


   

Time for a Universal and Faster System of Regulation for Low-chem and Bio Products?



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.articlesbacklink.com/rss.php?rss=88
By : Alison Withers   

Copyright (c) 2010 Alison Withers

Consumer fears about pesticide traces in the food they buy have led retailers to push for more stringent regulation.

The result of this pressure has been a reduction in the range of old-fashioned chemical pesticides on the market.

You would think that was good news for our health and food safet, and in many ways it is.

It can, however, be a headache for farmers and other growers in some parts of the world, wanting to switch to newere, more low-chem pruducts and to integrated pest control systems.

The problem is the time and cost of getting the various low-chem bio-pesticides and more natural yield enhancement products in development through the licensing process.

There is a limit to the quantities that can be sold because the new products waiting to come onto the market are more focused on specific location and pests.

According to Dr Justin Greaves (Warwick University, Nov 2007): "...the market size is too small to provide economies of scale and encourage firms to enter. Because bioipesticides are niche products with very specific applications, any one product has a smaller potential market size."

Moreover, he adds: "Bureaucrats and regulators are naturally risk averse. Their desire to avoid things going wrong means they are not natural innovators. In other words, being risk averse does not create an encouraging environment for regulatory innovation."

Prof Wyn Grant, also of Warwick University, UK, warned in 2007: Biopesticide are much more sustainable long term and much safer for humans.

"However, our current regulatory system is set up for synthetic pesticides - it costs up to €2.5m per product. Because biopesticides are so targeted this is a particular problem - it means their market is much smaller than the old-style kill-everything pesticides."

That's further complicated by the lack of a universally recognised regulation and licensing system.

It seems, too, that costs and timescales from development through licensing to a product on the market have increased dramatically over the last decade or so.

UK consultancy company Phillips McDougall recently found that the average cost of discovering, developing and registering a new crop protection product rose by 39% to $256 million between 2000 and 2005-08.

That followed the 21% increase to $184 million between 1995 and 2000 found in an earlier study. Development costs rose by 85% to $146 million between 2000 and 2005-08, and had more than doubled from 1995.

The greatest increase was seen in the cost of field trials, which doubled between 2000 and 2005-08 to $54 million. The study attributed the increase to regulatory bodies' demand for more efficacy data as they direct development products at an increasing number of crops and targets.

Between 2000 and 2005-08 registration costs also more than doubled with the study pinpointing internal company costs as the major reason for the increase, potentially because of the cost of putting dossiers together and of the personnel require to do this.

And finally bringing a new product to market rose on average from 9.1 years in 2000 to 9.8 years in 2005-08.

It's something that exercises Marcus Meadows-Smith, CEO of a leading US-based company specialising in researching low-chem agricultural products, who contrasts reduced regulatory requirements and review times in the US with the significantly longer and "considerably more onerous" EU process, which makes no distinction between bio- and conventional pesticides.

All of which is pretty alarming for consumers, retailers and farmers - waiting a decade for more environmentally-friendly bio-pesticides and other low-chem agricultural products when we're constantly being urged to do our bit towards helping restore an environment under extreme threat.

What are the odds of persuading bureaucrats who are generally risk averse to innovate and come up with a universally recognised regulation and licensing system to speed things up a bit - in preference a system that supports sustainability and avoids adding a cost burden for future generations?

1st page google ranking
Author Resource:- It can take up to ten years before new bio-pesticides grind their way through an expensive testing and licensing regime before they come onto the market. Consumer journalist Ali Withers asks can consumers, farmers and the planet wait that long and can bureaucrats across the world work together to devise a universal regulation process?
Article From Articles Back Link

Related Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
Rate This Article
Vote to see the results!

Do you like this article?
  • Yes.
  • Not Sure.
  • No.
New Members
 
select
Sign up
select
Learn more
 
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors