The Prague Post - In Colombia, illegally felled timber repurposed to help bees

EUR -
AED 4.310555
AFN 80.976454
ALL 96.823837
AMD 450.027646
ANG 2.101155
AOA 1076.160019
ARS 1701.464628
AUD 1.764515
AWG 2.112418
AZN 1.99972
BAM 1.956676
BBD 2.364329
BDT 142.863975
BGN 1.956053
BHD 0.441168
BIF 3459.08439
BMD 1.173566
BND 1.505955
BOB 8.111529
BRL 6.274356
BSD 1.173911
BTN 103.554343
BWP 15.637803
BYN 3.976197
BYR 23001.884322
BZD 2.361048
CAD 1.625917
CDF 3327.058693
CHF 0.934992
CLF 0.028565
CLP 1120.591243
CNY 8.361307
CNH 8.358287
COP 4572.504683
CRC 591.364815
CUC 1.173566
CUP 31.099486
CVE 110.755294
CZK 24.324263
DJF 208.566527
DKK 7.46464
DOP 74.198728
DZD 152.253744
EGP 56.346944
ERN 17.603483
ETB 168.583148
FJD 2.627266
FKP 0.865077
GBP 0.865653
GEL 3.15735
GGP 0.865077
GHS 14.322025
GIP 0.865077
GMD 83.914454
GNF 10163.077878
GTQ 8.999915
GYD 245.597887
HKD 9.12824
HNL 30.724401
HRK 7.534765
HTG 153.608132
HUF 390.89166
IDR 19255.745805
ILS 3.914974
IMP 0.865077
INR 103.599842
IQD 1537.37084
IRR 49377.769947
ISK 143.234125
JEP 0.865077
JMD 188.314328
JOD 0.832104
JPY 173.350931
KES 151.981197
KGS 102.628756
KHR 4698.95678
KMF 492.315191
KPW 1056.151575
KRW 1634.812435
KWD 0.358372
KYD 0.978326
KZT 634.766137
LAK 25437.0332
LBP 105092.793321
LKR 354.200121
LRD 227.783247
LSL 20.385281
LTL 3.465234
LVL 0.709879
LYD 6.349436
MAD 10.591475
MDL 19.498482
MGA 5251.706139
MKD 61.56757
MMK 2463.395577
MNT 4221.129515
MOP 9.410334
MRU 46.842914
MUR 53.401622
MVR 17.967732
MWK 2039.65729
MXN 21.640788
MYR 4.934889
MZN 75.003016
NAD 20.385276
NGN 1763.051862
NIO 43.105504
NOK 11.571478
NPR 165.678074
NZD 1.970062
OMR 0.449944
PAB 1.173971
PEN 4.097509
PGK 4.911963
PHP 67.093181
PKR 330.417813
PLN 4.256594
PYG 8388.756514
QAR 4.272487
RON 5.066327
RSD 117.156567
RUB 98.288025
RWF 1695.802186
SAR 4.402815
SBD 9.631311
SCR 16.693643
SDG 705.903978
SEK 10.93388
SGD 1.507449
SHP 0.922238
SLE 27.432139
SLL 24609.086612
SOS 670.696996
SRD 46.209187
STD 24290.436982
STN 24.938267
SVC 10.270637
SYP 15258.561104
SZL 20.385266
THB 37.155517
TJS 11.046553
TMT 4.119215
TND 3.407611
TOP 2.748612
TRY 48.49936
TTD 7.981472
TWD 35.558923
TZS 2886.971589
UAH 48.396578
UGX 4125.900328
USD 1.173566
UYU 47.021257
UZS 14593.287716
VES 186.280467
VND 30964.526421
VUV 140.150541
WST 3.118068
XAF 656.24248
XAG 0.027819
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.17162
XCG 2.11572
XDR 0.815946
XOF 654.266998
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.128048
ZAR 20.405125
ZMK 10563.502225
ZMW 27.851116
ZWL 377.887621
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    56.59

    -1.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.36

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    15.42

    +1.95%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    24.4

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.6500

    40.83

    -1.59%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.85

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    0.5300

    71.6

    +0.74%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    46.5

    +0.37%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    16.81

    -1.13%

  • BP

    -0.5800

    33.89

    -1.71%

  • RIO

    -0.1000

    62.44

    -0.16%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    14.23

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    24.16

    -0.58%

  • AZN

    -1.5400

    79.56

    -1.94%

  • BCC

    -3.3300

    85.68

    -3.89%

In Colombia, illegally felled timber repurposed to help bees
In Colombia, illegally felled timber repurposed to help bees / Photo: Juan BARRETO - AFP

In Colombia, illegally felled timber repurposed to help bees

In northeast Colombia, police guard warehouses stacked high with confiscated timber with a noble new destiny: transformation into homes for bees beleaguered by pesticides and climate change.

Text size:

The illegally harvested wood is used in the Santander department's "Timber Returns Home" initiative, building hives since 2021 to house the little pollinators so critical to human survival.

So far, the project has seen about 200 cubic meters (7,060 cubic feet) of wood transformed into 1,000 bee hives, with another 10,000 planned for the next phase, according to the Santander environmental authority.

Previously, confiscated timber was turned into sawdust, donated to municipalities for projects... and sometimes just left to rot.

Now it is being repurposed to help address the "extremely serious problem" of possible bee extinction, said biologist German Perilla, director of the Honey Bee Impact Foundation.

About three quarters of crops producing fruits or seeds for human consumption depend on pollination, but the UN has warned that 40 percent of invertebrate pollinators -- particularly bees and butterflies -- risk global extinction.

"The main threat is that we will run out of trees and there will be no flowers, because without flowers there are no bees, without bees there are no humans, and we will run out of food," said beekeeper Maria Acevedo, one of the beneficiaries of the project.

In 2023 alone, she told AFP, she lost more than half of her hives. She blames pesticides used in nearby production of crops such as coffee.

- Multiple threats -

According to official data, some 3,000 hives, each able to house around 50,000 bees, die off in Colombia each year. Laboratory tests found traces of the insecticide fipronil in most of the dead insects.

Colombia has issued a ban on fipronil -- already banned in Europe and restricted in the United States and China -- starting February 2024.

According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, higher temperatures, droughts, floods and other extreme events caused by climate change reduces nectar-bearing flowers that bees feed on, and studies have also linked bee infertility to heat stress.

The Santander environmental authority seizes some 1,000 cubic meters of illegally felled timber in anti-trafficking operations in Santander every year.

The country lost 123,517 hectares (305,200 acres) of trees in 2022, mainly in the Amazon -- the world's largest rainforest.

Nearly half of all timber traded in Colombia is of illegal origin, according to the environment ministry.

W.Cejka--TPP