European Union lawmakers and governments struck a deal on Thursday over
a wide-ranging draft law on toxic chemicals, putting it on track to
enter force in the first part of 2007. A negotiator for Finland, holder
of the EU presidency, told Reuters the deal would have to be approved by
member states and parliamentarians, but those steps were seen as a
formality after weeks of talks that almost broke down on Monday.
The bill, known as REACH (Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of
Chemicals), was designed to make companies prove that substances in
every-day products like cars, clothes or paint are safe. "REACH is
done," said Chris Davies, a member of the Liberal Democrat party and one
of the negotiators.
He said he expected member states and the full parliament to sign up to
the deal in the coming weeks. "It s a take it or leave it, and no one s
going to leave it," he said. A spokesman for the Finnish presidency said
EU ambassadors would meet next week. A vote in the parliament is
scheduled for mid-December.
Under REACH, the properties of roughly 30,000 chemicals produced or
imported into the European Union would have to be registered with a
central agency. Those of highest concern, such as carcinogens, would
require testing and authorisation.
The chemicals industry and the US government have attacked the
legislation as imposing a costly extra burden on business.
Lawmakers and member states have been discussing the bill for weeks. In
October, the parliament s environment committee voted in favour of an
amendment that would deny approval for dangerous chemicals if suitable
alternatives exist. That conflicted with a version of the bill supported
by EU governments that would authorise some toxic chemicals if companies
prove they could be adequately controlled.
The two sides bridged their differences on Thursday
Davies said the agreement would require that persistent,
bio-accumulative and toxic chemicals be removed from the market if
suitable alternatives existed.
Manufacturers will also have to submit a "substitution plan" when
seeking authorisation for the roughly 1,500 chemicals expected to be
considered of high concern. If they can be adequately controlled, the
substances will then be approved.
If a deal had not been struck before the December parliament vote, talks
could have stretched far into 2007.
Davies said the deal will ensure REACH takes effect on time.
"It's supposed to come into force in April, and we wouldn't have
finished conciliation by April, so it couldn't have possibly come into
force then," he said.
(Por Jeff Mason e Gerard Wynn,
Planet Ark, 01/12/2006)