TRADE UNIONS SAY REACH WILL DELIVER 3.5 BILLION EUROS SAVINGS OVER 10 YEARS

Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2005
 
24/10/2005 - A study on the benefits of REACH for workers' health commissioned by the European Trade Union Confederation's (ETUC) research institute and done by the University of Sheffield, shows that REACH would help avoid 50,000 cases of occupational respiratory diseases and 40,000 cases of occupational skin diseases from exposure to dangerous chemicals in Europe each year.

According to the study, that would add up to total average savings of 3.5 billion euros over 10 years for the EU-25. The savings would boost social security coffers through reduced sickness benefit payments, while workers would enjoy health-related quality of life gains, and employers in all sectors would avoid productivity losses from sickness absenteeism.

WWF believes further benefits are to be expected through reduction of other types of occupational diseases, as well as benefits derived from re-gained consumers' trust and a healthier environment.

The study was presented on Monday 17th October in the European Parliament.

The lead rapporteur on REACH, Guido Sacconi, said "this important study gives a salutary reminder that while REACH may have a cost, benefits are also to be expected in terms of human health, especially that of workers, and that is one of the key aims of the reform".

WWF coincides with ETUC in saying that the potential benefits of REACH depend very much on the information the REACH system would produce both on the hazards of chemicals, and on how the risks related to their uses would be managed.

This highlights the need for safety information on all chemicals, a Chemical Safety Report and a legally binding duty of care, something WWF has been calling for since REACH was being developed.

"Thousands of people are exposed to chemicals in the workplace every day. And regardless of the production volume, without basic safety information on these substances, the risks cannot be assessed'', said WWF’s DetoX Campaign Director, Karl Wagner.

That is why WWF calls on the European Parliament voting on REACH in 4 weeks to ensure that:

• deliver safer chemicals in daily use for citizens, consumers, workers and the environment;
• identify and control harmful chemicals with effective and systematic procedures;
• promote suitable safer alternatives to replace chemicals of very high concerns.

 
 

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

 
 
 
 

 

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