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Last 8th July, an impressive coalition of European environmental, consumer, health, and women’s groups presented Europe’s most widely supported submission to the European Commission’s consultation on future chemicals law.

The submission was presented to European Commissioner Wallstrom by a coalition of the European Consumers Organisation, European Environmental Bureau, European Public Health Alliance, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, Women in Europe for a Common Future, and WWF in the last week of the consultation on the draft directive on the proposed REACH legislation.

The Declaration for a Toxics Free Future, signed by 23,600 people as well as 483 wide-ranging public interest organisations, calls on the European Commission to protect health and the environment from hazardous chemicals. In addition to the coalition of groups presenting the Declaration, it was also supported by organisations including the Netherlands’ Council of Women, the German Childbirth Association, and the British Allergy Foundation.

The coalition presented the Declaration to Commissioner Wallstrom with the demand that the Commission listen to the people and accept their submission as part of the ongoing Internet consultation on the draft legislation, ending on July 10.

The Declaration asks the European Commission to ensure that its new REACH legislation on chemicals includes

- an obligation to phase out and substitute chemicals that accumulate in wildlife, humans or the environment, and those that disrupt hormones. Restricted uses of such chemicals should only be permitted temporarily, if safer alternatives are not available, and the use is essential to society;

- a full right to know, for both consumers and businesses, including what chemicals are present in products;

- a requirement that products imported into the EU have to conform to the same safety standards as those made in the EU.

The widespread contamination of people and wildlife with man-made chemicals is well documented: 300 man-made chemicals have been found in the bodies of people with no special exposure to chemicals; and many man-made chemicals have been founded in house dust and rainwater.

A recent report by eminent UK scientists [1] confirmed the need for a fundamental reform of chemicals policy, with one of its authors stating "Given our understanding of the way chemicals interact with the environment, you could say we are running a gigantic experiment with humans and all other living things as the subject". This report also endorsed the importance of substituting the worst chemicals with safer alternatives.

In addition to the 22,000 citizens calling for strong EU legislation on chemicals, a separate declaration in favour of REACH has been submitted by over 60 US organisations (including the Communications Workers of America and The Breast Cancer Fund) and signed by more than 10,000 US citizens. In order to make REACH work for civil society, European Environmental Bureau, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace and WWF are also submitting detailed joint comments to the Commission’s consultation which ends on July 10.



Footnotes

[1] "Chemicals in products. Safeguarding human health and the Environment", UK Royal Commission on Environment and Pollution, June 2003.

Last modified on October 30 2003.

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25 November 2003 16:05, by brigid curran

> European Citizens Say "Protect Us From Hazardous Chemicals"

I would like to read a copy of the EU legislation on PVC, Phthalates and APEO’s (hormonal changes in species )

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