On the positive side, the legislation sets Europe
on a first modest step towards a new approach to the regulation of
chemicals: companies will have to provide safety data for large volume
chemicals that they produce or import into Europe, and there is a
mechanism for the substitution of persistent and bioaccumulative
chemicals if safer alternatives exist. It also allows the public to
request information about the presence of a limited number of hazardous
chemicals in products.
In the past, companies could sell
almost whichever chemical they liked without providing health and
safety information; and hazardous chemicals were only restricted in
response to scandal on a case-by-case basis.
But major loopholes in REACH will still allow many chemicals that can
cause serious health problems, including cancer, birth defects and
reproductive illnesses, to continue being used in manufacturing and
consumer goods. Further concessions exempt companies that import and
manufacture chemicals in volumes below 10 tonnes a year - 60 percent of
chemicals covered by REACH - from the requirement to provide any
meaningful safety data.
Because the REACH law is complex and
has taken many years to be agreed, we asked Jorgo Riss of the
Greenpeace European Unit to look at the most important elements. He
remembers the birth and growth of our campaign to protect human health
and the environment from the threat of hazardous chemicals present in
our daily lives. He also reflects on how far we came on our campaign
for a strong chemical law and the high and lows along the way:
Jorgo Riss - Greenpeace European Unit Director.
The vision
It was clear for a long time that existing laws were failing to protect
us from hazardous chemicals. Back in 1996 we were already calling for a
reform of European chemicals rules. Axel Singhofen, then our toxics
policy adviser at our European Unit in Brussels, sounded the alarm
because it was taking years for decision-makers to restrict the use of
just one single very harmful chemical, even with compelling scientific
evidence.
Chemicals were still being used even when safer
alternatives could replace (substitute) the use of that chemical. And
there were a lot more nasty chemicals still out there. Most of the
100,000 chemicals on the market today have never been tested for
safety. Chemical companies could produce and sell almost any chemical
without restriction, and it was up to the public authorities to prove
that a chemical was dangerous before they could restrict its use or ban
it. This made the safety assessment of chemicals a very slow process,
ensuring a toxic future for centuries to come.
The world
desperately needed a new approach that would hold companies responsible
for the safety of their products. We shouldn't have to wait for years
to pass laws to take a toxic chemical off the market if we can prevent
the problem before it starts.
In 1999 we set out the basic principles that eventually became part of REACH. In our report "
The way forward out of the chemical crisis",
we argued that companies should not be able to sell a chemical without
first providing information about its safety (no data, no market) and
that the most hazardous chemicals should systematically be replaced
whenever a safer alternative is available.
The EU is the
world's biggest chemicals market, and we realised that a reform in the
EU had the potential to trigger a worldwide shift away from toxic
chemicals and towards clean production. In 2001, the European
Commission published its outline ('white paper') on a future chemicals
policy for Europe. We got ready to promote the essential elements of
the reform, 'no data, no market' for all chemicals, and substitution
for the most hazardous ones.
By the time I joined the EU Unit
as policy advisor on REACH in 2001, replacing Axel, the European
chemicals industry was already stepping up its campaign to stop REACH
dead in its tracks. The proposal was to be progressively attacked from
now on, with the anti-REACH lobby mainly organised by the big German
chemicals companies and the US government.
REACH promised to
be one of the largest legislative reforms ever voted on within the EU.
We realized that our campaign would need to be very focused if we were
to succeed in defending the reform. It was clear that for REACH to be
effective in protecting people and wildlife from hazardous chemicals,
the law would have to be able to push innovative solutions that would
lead to the phase out of the most hazardous substances and replace them
with safer alternatives. We called this the Substitution Principle,
which at the time was not a very well known concept among EU
decision-makers.
Once the scale of attack being launched by
the European chemicals industry became clear, I realised we needed to
ramp up our campaign throughout Europe, to involve the public and make
sure the powerful chemicals lobby cannot wreck the reform before anyone
outside of Brussels ever even heard of it. Our first objective was to
make sure the European Commission actually followed up on the white
paper with a proper legislative proposal that could eventually become
law. After an intense lobby battle, the Commission finally came forward
with the
draft law in 2003.
Showing the problem
We first needed to show the problem by demonstrating how far this
invisible chemical contamination of our environment has got out of
control.
Testing house dust shows how many toxic chemicals could be lurking in your home.
In 2003,
we vacuumed homes and offices across Europe to reveal how hazardous
chemicals used in consumer products, and that are associated with
cancer and effects on our hormone and reproductive systems, can get
into our homes.
In 2004, we tested a wide range of consumer
products: toys, electronics, textiles, cosmetics, cleaning products and
found hazardous substances in all categories of products. We tested
children's Disney clothes
and found toxic chemicals. Disney refused to ask its suppliers to
eliminate these chemicals. This again highlighted the need for a strong
chemical law to get companies to remove toxic chemicals out of their
products.
In late 2005, we showed the contamination of
umbilical cord blood samples.
The findings showed that pregnant women are routinely passing hazardous
chemicals to babies in the womb, before they are born.
We
also showed that hazardous chemicals used in consumer products were
causing problems in the environment, contaminating water and endangered
eels.
Pregnant women protest against manmade toxic chemicals that contaminate unborn babies. The protest took place outside the office of new German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is seeking to weaken proposed European law on toxic chemicals.
Our activists
took to the streets to highlight the problem: in Germany, pregnant
women protested outside their government ministry and naked men
highlighted the threat of toxic chemicals to healthy sperm.
Prompting the solution
Hand in hand with our work in labs and on the streets, we were talking
to companies to help find the solution to the problem. We approached
brand product manufacturers and asked them to commit to substitute any
harmful chemicals in their products with safer alternatives. Their
answers formed the basis for our
Chemical Home website.
Bad companies were red; those who promised to make improvements were
amber, while the most progressive, which were already working with safe
substances and not using hazardous chemicals, were indicated with green.
Many more took up the challenge to green their production process and
take toxics out of consumer goods. Reebok, Samsung, Puma, Nokia and
Playmobil are just a handful of the
many companies that have adopted good substitution policies to phase out hazardous chemicals.
In Spain, we worked with top names in Spanish fashion and fashion giants Mango and Camper to create
Moda Sin Tóxicos,
a toxic-free fashion show at which the designers showed one-off outfits
without using hazardous chemicals commonly used in the textiles
industry. Mango and Camper both committed to implement substitution
policies over the coming years.
The toxic lobby
Some politicians in Europe are bending over backwards to put dirty industry profits before public interest.
In contrast to the strong support for REACH from medical associations,
trade unions, consumer groups and other environmental organisations,
the powerful vested interests of the
chemicals industry fought against a stronger chemical law.
The opposition was spearheaded by the powerful German chemical
industry. With a budget of millions and an army of Brussels lobbyists
they set about trying to destroy REACH. Even the polluters' best
friend, the US Bush Administration, chimed in to threaten the EU over
REACH. Scare tactics abounded, with talk of hugely inflated costs and
exaggerated job losses.
This lobbying initially aimed to
prevent REACH from ever seeing the light of day, and later in 2006
managed to weaken safety data and substitution requirements in the
final compromise deal between the European Parliament, the EU Member
States and the Commission. Compared to the original REACH proposal of
2003, the scope of the new law that will enter into force in 2007 is
now more limited, and safety data requirements are reduced.
The start of a new era?
Looking back there were many highs and lows, but overall I think we
played an important part in making sure that the wider public interest
for better health and a cleaner environment, influenced the debate and
the decisions about REACH over the past 10 years.
Regrettably, REACH does not have all it takes to adequately protect us
and future generations from further contamination - far from it - but
now for the first time a law is in place that can, if properly
enforced, help reduce our daily exposure to chemicals that can cause
cancer, birth defects and affect reproductive health. The EU decided to
give the chemicals companies up to 11 years to come forward with safety
data, which is irresponsibly slow. But despite all its scandalous
shortcomings, REACH could be the beginning of a new era.
One
thing is for sure: it is doubtful that REACH would have come even this
far without the tireless campaigning around Europe, the great support
and encouragement from medical associations, trade unions, progressive
businesses, and the mails from you, our supporters, to your ministers,
Members of Parliament and European Commissioners.
The work is
not over. Next year, a new EU Chemicals Agency will open in Helsinki,
charged with processing information from chemical companies and
starting to single out the most hazardous for substitution. We will
keep a watchful eye on the work of this Agency, and we will not
hesitate to cry foul if ever a known hazardous chemical is given
authorization when it could have been replaced with something safer.