Farmer fury and environmental anger in protest-hit Germany By Florian CAZERES and Kit HOLDEN Berlin (AFP) Jan 18, 2020 From grumpy bee-keepers dumping honey on politicians' doorsteps to furious farmers holding up traffic, increasing tensions between farmers and environmentalists have overshadowed the opening of the biggest show on Germany's agriculture calendar. Thousands of tractors descended on cities across Germany on Friday at the opening of Berlin's annual "Green Week" trade fair, as the farmer's collective "Land schafft Verbindung" (LSV) railed against tightening regulations. Aggrieved at Germany's latest agricultural reform that includes introducing an animal welfare label on food products and restrictions on pesticides to protect insects, the protesters claim they are carrying the costs for new environmental protection measures. "Don't forget that farmers feed you" and "No farm, no food, no future", read placards held aloft by farmers, who fear the new laws will slash their revenues. On Saturday, it was the turn of the other side. Organisers said around 27,000 turned out in Berlin, gathering around the famous Brandenburg Gate to protest what they say are the damaging effects of agriculture and to call for a change to the current way of farming in Germany. The rally was organised by "We are fed up!", an environmentalist group. With protesting farmers on one side and climate activists arguing that recent reforms do not go far enough, lawmakers are caught in the middle. The gulf between farmers and environmental activists has deepened in recent years as climate protection shot to the top of the political agenda following weeks of student-led Friday for Futures school strike protests. Saturday's protest, in which the green groups-led protests demand full-scale reform to support small farms and environmentally friendly agriculture, has been a yearly fixture since 2011. "The agriculture industry is fuelling the climate crisis and societal conflict -- we have to stop it!" the organisers state on their website. The LSV protesters consider themselves a counterweight to the "We are fed up" activists. - 'Bring city and country together' - At the opening of the Green Week on Thursday, Agriculture Minister Julia Kloeckner urged both sides to be open to compromise. "We need to bring the city and the country together," said Kloeckner. Both LSV and "We are fed up!" have said they are open to talks with each other. But in practice, there has been little sign of a rapprochement. "We are open to dialogue with the farmers, but we have to have the same objective of ecological transition. Sometimes I have the impression that that is not the case," Saskia Richartz, a spokeswoman for "We are fed up", told AFP. Mark, a 22-year-old farmer and LSV protester from Brandenburg, was more blunt in his criticism of environmentalists. "These people have nothing to do with agriculture," he told AFP. Saturday's protesters are not the only ones who are fed up with industrial agriculture. On Wednesday, two beekeepers from the countryside outside Berlin dumped buckets of honey on the steps of the Ministry for Agriculture. They claimed that the use of glyphosate in nearby fields forced them to throw away four tonnes of honey every year. On Friday, Greenpeace activists held a protest at Green Week against cheap meat prices. Yet Green Party co-leader Robert Habeck warned environmentalists against making farmers into bogeymen. "We won't get anywhere with moral disdain," Habeck told media group RND on Friday. But he also insisted that resisting reform was not the way forward. "Less protection for the climate and for animals is not the right answer," he said. fcz/kih/jj/cdw
Plant-powered sensor sends signal to space Paris (ESA) Jan 17, 2020 A device that uses electricity generated by plants as its power source has communicated via satellite - a world first. Such sensors could be used to connect everyday objects in remote locations, enabling them to send and receive data as part of the Internet of Things. The device can inform farmers about the conditions of their crops to help increase yield, and enable retailers to gain detailed information about potential harvests. It transmits data on air humidity, soil moisture and te ... read more
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