REACH IS ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL SAYS EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENT AGENCY

Environmental Panorama
Brussels - Belgium
February of 2005

 

08/02/2005 Professor Jacqueline McGlade, EEA’s Director was already a REACH supporter and her own ‘chemical check-up’ reconfirmed her belief in the importance of controlling hazardous chemicals.

Professor McGlade was blood tested by WWF in December 2003 and found the results disturbing and surprising. Among the 35 chemicals found in her blood, she had a high number of phthalates and a relatively high level of perfluorinated chemicals (PFOS and PFOA) and PCBs.

"I was surprised as I am fairly careful about what I do", she explained.
"When I ran a biochemistry laboratory and was searching for particular chemicals, I didn’t realise the amount of pollution I was receiving from my daily life". She attributes the presence of phthalates in her blood to their use in her children’s toys and clothes during the 1970s and 80s.

As a scientist, who in the past has studied hazardous chemicals, she believes that REACH is absolutely essential.

"We need legislation like this to control chemicals that are accumulating in the natural environment, as we don’t know how many are building up in the soil. REACH could control them, if the Community institutions follow the Commission’s original proposal," she said.

On a personal level have the results made any difference?

"With the high level of PCBs they found, I am looking for foods grown organically", she explained. "In household chores I use rose water rather than new products that use nano chemicals, as these can be absorbed through the skin".

Professor McGlade is the Director of the EEA and has used her results to explain to a wider audience the dangers of long-term exposures at low dosages.

"This shows that over a lifetime, even if we try to avoid chemicals, low doses build up in our bodies".

The most isolated populations can be the worse effected

The danger of long-term exposures is also the message of a seminal EEA study: Chemicals in the European Environment: Low Doses, High Stakes?

Chemicals in the European Environment describes research showing how chemicals are carried through the atmosphere, causing damage to wildlife and humans thousands of miles from the source of production or consumption. McGlade used the example of the Inuit in Greenland to explain the effect this is having.

"The female Inuit population in Greenland now has such a high chemical burden that their lives are literally being shortened. The chemicals are being carried through the atmosphere or in the water where they are absorbed by fish and carried up the marine food chain. The chemical concentration in seals is so high that it is well over WHO recommended levels. An Inuit woman eats seal meat as part of her regular diet and will absorb these chemicals".

Guarding against chemical hazards

So what is the answer for guarding against the spread of these chemicals?

"Obviously, we could take precautions over the use and spread of dangerous chemicals if we knew the pathways they go through", she said. "The EEA is currently trying to track these down".

Taking a long-term view on chemical regulation

So how did she view the lobbying that has been gaining momentum as the REACH negotiations enter their final stage?

"The better end of the chemical industry doesn’t complain - they understand the point of it", she explained. "However, sometimes it seems that the trade associations are being brought down to the lowest common denominator".

She believes that in the long term the chemical companies could benefit from REACH. It would ensure that all the chemicals they produce are safe and so save them from the possibility of facing cases for chemical damage.

She referred to the current law suit brought by the Arctic Inuit against the USA government on the grounds that USA greenhouse gas emissions are destroying the Inuit way of life. She foresaw that this might happen with chemicals. "It could be possible to take a ‘class action’ against companies which produce a particularly hazardous chemical", she explained.

In fact this is already beginning to happen. Residents near the DuPont production plant in North Carolina have taken up a class action suit against DuPont for polluting their water with PFOS and PFOA (the same chemicals found in McGlade’s blood) during the process of producing Teflon.

Professor McGlade is clearly someone who takes a long-term global perspective on chemical regulation, "We have to have REACH. At present we are spreading contamination to all parts of the world," she concluded.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Julian Scola)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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