In 2012, the European Food Safety Authority published a report documenting the harmful effects of pesticides on bee populations.
Not long after, the European Commission ordered a ban on three pesticides deemed most harmful.
In the years that have followed, researchers have documented a significant resurgence in European bee populations.
Fantastic! Surely the U.S. has followed suit, right?
Not quite.
The three pesticides banned in Europe – clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiamethoxam – are still being widely used stateside.
President Obama has even signed a bill protecting large biotech corporations like Monsanto and Bayer from being prosecuted for the damaging effects of their products.
To make matters worse, study after study is demonstrating just how devastating those effects are.
Biologists have found that over 150 pesticides out there are largely responsible for a 60% reduction in the total bee population.
Too bad bees can't read signs.
Even American scientists are criticizing pesticide use in the country for its effect on bees.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency acknowledged that neonicotinoids – the same class of pesticides banned in Europe more than three years ago – cause bee populations to decline.
And yet their use continues.
28% of all U.S. bees have been wiped out this year alone, as one study found.
The government response has been underwhelming. While Europe takes action, policy makers in countries like the U.S. and Canada form committees to further explore the – well documented – effects of pesticides before reaching a conclusion.