The vote is the latest round in the progress of the new European
legislation called REACH which was originally intended to replace
current ineffective laws that are failing to protect us from toxic
pollution. But almost from the moment it was suggested it has been
under fire from vested interests who profit from pollution.
Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) resisted industry pressure
when they supported replacing hazardous chemicals with safer
alternatives. In the past month concerned citizens have sent almost
15,000 emails and photos to MEPs demanding protection from chemical
pollution. But industry lobbying succeeded in convincing MEPs to
exempt thousands of chemicals from the need to provide any health and
safety information.
Currently about 90 percent of the thousands of chemicals in daily use
have no or insufficient health and safety data. If the law fails to
require basic safety information about chemicals it will make it
impossible to systematically identify and replace the most hazardous
substances which is the one of the principle aims of REACH.
Round one
The road from proposal to law for any European legislation is long and
winding and REACH has taken longer than most and still has a few rounds
left to go. Intense industry lobbying has helped delay and weaken the
proposal and it will next be discussed by national governments.
Hopefully national governments will stand up for their people and
strengthen the proposal rather than weaken it further in favour of
polluting industry pressure.
We'll be campaigning hard to pressure the national governments to take
decisive action on toxic pollution and not cave into pressure coming
from the German government that is trying to wreak the proposal to
favour its large chemical industry lobby. Recently we have be
highlighting the
top Brussels politicians who are doing the bidding of
polluting chemical industry.
Rest of the world?
While the intricacies of European law making
can seem somewhat mundane and remote, this proposed law has far
reaching consequences. As the world's largest market for chemicals new
law in Europe will set a global standard for the regulation of
chemicals. The chemical industry knows that this could cut their
polluting practices and have spent millions lobbying against it.
This is a unique opportunity to
protect us and the environment and it should not be sacrificed for the
short-sighted interests of the large chemicals producers.