News

Beekeeping, Tiso(Confeuro): Protecting Italian honey is a government priority

Honey
Italy
Regulation & Compliances
Sustainability & Environmental Impact
Published Mar 26, 2024

Tridge summary

The Italian honey industry is currently facing significant challenges, including competition from non-EU imports and the impacts of climate change, which are threatening the livelihoods of local beekeepers by reducing profitability and increasing production costs. Andrea Tiso, the national president of Confeuro, is calling for urgent action on three fronts: legislative measures to protect against non-EU commercial dumping, stricter pesticide regulations to safeguard bees, and an awareness campaign encouraging consumers to check the origin of honey labels. These steps are deemed crucial for the survival and quality maintenance of Italian honey production, urging the government to act swiftly to support the industry.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

We are following with great attention and deep concern the situation of Italian honey, put in crisis by unfair imports and climate change. In particular, the profitability of our beekeepers risks being undermined by the imports of non-EU products of poor quality and with prices that are absolutely out of the market, as well as by the increase in production costs also due to atmospheric disturbances. In short, an alarming and problematic context that must be immediately addressed by the national government. In the opinion of Confeuro, which expresses strong closeness to the beekeeping sector, it is necessary to act urgently on 3 fronts: first of all in the legislative sphere, protecting Italian beekeeping companies from non-EU commercial dumping. Especially through urgent CAP reform. Secondly, we must immediately return to the pesticide issue, looking for a valid alternative to protect bees from the poisons of pesticides. Last but not least, propose an awareness campaign among ...
Source: Agricolae
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