Indústria enfrenta parlamento Europeu para continuar produzindo substâncias prejudiciais ao homem (em inglês)
2006-10-13
Companies seeking to produce or import hazardous chemicals in the European Union will have to use safer alternative substances when available under rules expected to be endorsed by EU lawmakers on Tuesday.
Substituting safe chemicals for more dangerous ones is the most divisive
issue between industry and environmentalists in a draft law called REACH
(Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of Chemicals), which faces a
vote in the European Parliaments environment committee.
The bill was designed to protect the public from the adverse effects of
chemicals found in a wide range of products such as paint, detergents, cars
and computers.
Chemical makers would have to register the properties of substances in a
central EU database. Those of highest concern, such as carcinogens, would
require authorisation to be used.
The authorisation process has become the chief point of contention as the
bill nears the end of the EUs long legislative process.
Guido Sacconi, the parliament member chiefly responsible for steering the
bill, proposed an amendment that would deny approval for dangerous chemicals
if suitable alternatives exists.
Companies seeking authorisation would also have to prove the social and
economic advantages of a hazardous chemical "outweigh the risks to human
health or the environment which arise from the substance", according to the
text of the amendment.
His proposals are expected to be endorsed by the committee, although that
does not guarantee backing from the full parliament, which votes next, a
parliament official said.
INDUSTRY VS ENVIRONMENT
Business group UNICE urged lawmakers to ease the tougher rules to avoid
chemicals being taken off the market.
"The European Parliaments opinion on authorisation and substitution of
chemicals of high concern ... is still seen as highly problematic to
European companies," UNICE said in a letter to committee members.
"It could lead to a complete ban of certain substances even though there is
a clear socio-economic benefit and no alternative available."
The group urged lawmakers to follow the position of EU governments, which
would authorise dangerous chemicals if companies prove they can be
adequately controlled.
But environmental group WWF urged lawmakers to push for safer substances.
"If there is a safer available alternative, there is no reason to allow the
continued use of chemicals that we know to be carcinogenic or toxic to
reproduction," said WWF programme officer Justin Wilkes.
He said the principle of substitution would apply only to roughly 1,500
chemicals deemed to be of high concern for which industry would need
authorisation.
After the environment committee vote, Sacconi will seek a compromise with
representatives of EU member states before bringing the bill before the full
parliament for a vote.
Both parliament and EU member states will have to approve REACH before it
can become law.
(By Jeff Mason, Planet Ark, 10/10/2006)
http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/38435/story.htm