SCIENTIST CALL FOR PRECAUTIONARY ACTION ON ENDOCRINE DISRUPTERS

Environmental Panorama
Brussels - Belgium
January of 2005

 

27/01/2005 Alarmed by the rising numbers of breast and testicular cancers and the prevalence of reproductive disorders amongst young male Europeans, scientists call on European leaders to take urgent precautionary action on chemicals that interfere with the hormone system, the so-called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs).

The ‘Prague Declaration’, signed by more than a hundred toxicologists working on EU funded research projects on EDCs, raises concerns over the long-term effects of exposure to endocrine disrupters, and warns that the proposed EU legislation on chemicals (REACH) falls short of adequately protecting humans and wildlife from the harmful effects of these chemicals.

WWF shares the scientists' view and joins their call for action to make sure that REACH includes chemicals with endocrine disrupting properties in the group of hazardous substances that will need to undergo prior authorisation before they are allowed for continued use. This procedure ensures that preventative action can be taken before the damage is done.
But unfortunately, the current proposal suggests that before EDCs can be controlled in this way, they must be causing serious and irreversible effects. The scientists stress that "scientific uncertainty should not delay precautionary action for risk reduction".

Scientists know that Europeans are exposed to low levels of a large number of endocrine disrupters which can act in concert, and they warn that current safety tests do not account for the effects of this simultaneous exposure and may seriously underestimate the risks.

In fact, wildlife is already ringing the warning bells, and raises concern about the possible effects on humans. Findings like female molluscs with male sex organs, eggs found in the testes of male fish, and poor sperm quality, have already been documented as the likely result of endocrine disrupting chemicals in the environment.

The scientists note that "the consequences of such abnormalities for the balance and well being of entire ecosystems are not yet predictable, but the severity of effects observed indicates a potential impact on wildlife biodiversity from endocrine disrupters."

Humans and wildlife inhabit the same world, and the chemicals in creams and potions that we put on our bodies can end up down the drain, and in rivers and oceans. Some of these chemicals, along with those discharged from factories, or leaching from products, can build up in the food chain, to affect higher predators and humans.

Although the links between hormone-related disorders and exposure to EDCs are still difficult to prove, scientists suspect that the increased number of genital malformations in baby boys, the rising numbers of certain cancers, or the drastically low sperm counts in young men in certain parts of Europe may have something to do with exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals.

After all, we are surrounded by EDCs and many of them have already been detected in human tissue and blood. The immune system of young children can be affected by exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dioxins during development in the womb. Even if the levels are no longer rising due to a ban on PCBs and a reduction of dioxin emissions, this body burden will be present for generations to come.

Other chemicals with endocrine disrupting properties, like some of the highly persistent brominated substances, certain phthalates, or bisphenol A are still in widespread use, for example, as flame retardants, plasticisers, cosmetic ingredients, or in pharmaceutical products, plastic bottles, food can linings etc... These chemicals can act as imposters in the body, and subtly derail development. They may mimic the effects of natural hormones, or they may block their action, or interfere with their synthesis or breakdown.

With the ‘Prague Declaration’, the scientific community sends a serious warning message to European politicians about the long-term effects of endocrine disrupters. Emphasizing also the need for EDCs to be fully and properly covered by the new chemicals regulation (REACH).

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Noemi Cano)

 
 
 
 

 

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