New endocrine disruptor rules address your trade concerns, EU tells US, Canada

Health Commissioner Andiukaitis met with ambassadors from the USA, Canada, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay to discuss the trade implications of new law on endocrine disruptors. [European Parliament/Flickr]

EXCLUSIVE/ The European Commission told the US and Canada that draft EU pesticides laws would “address the concerns” they had over possible trade restrictions on goods exposed to endocrine disruptors.

Health Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis met with ambassadors from the US, Canada, Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay on 13 July this year, a month after the executive published new criteria for the potentially harmful disruptors.

The EU has recently finalised CETA, its free trade agreement with Canada. It is negotiating a similar deal with the US, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). The EU is trying to secure another deal with the Mercosur trading bloc, which includes Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay.

euractiv.com has obtained Commission minutes of the meeting, which would have remained secret had it not been for a freedom of information application.

They revealed that the US and Canada heaped pressure on the EU over its risk-evaluation method for endocrine disruptors, chemicals used in some pesticides that can be dangerous to human health.

The Commission said new exceptions, if backed by the EU’s Parliament and Council, would use a different risk-evaluation method.

Vito Buonsante, a lawyer with environmental NGO ClientEarth, said, “The Commission claims that the change in how to manage endocrine disruptors was aimed to increase protection for EU citizens. But it turns out they were increasing satisfaction for trade partners instead.

“This will make it easier for countries with weaker pesticides protection – like Canada and the United States – to import food into the EU.”

There is fierce debate about how best to evaluate the risk endocrine disruptors pose. In general, the EU prefers the precautionary principle approach to the risk-based method used in the other countries.

Under the precautionary approach, which is also known as the hazard approach, substances are evaluated on whether they are likely to cause harm if there is not enough scientific evidence to definitively say they do . If risk is likely, they can face restrictions, such as a ban on the import of goods exposed to them.

The risk-based approach only imposes restrictions if a chemical can be shown by scientific research to cause harm. The precautionary approach affords greater protection but critics claim it is too restrictive.

Pesticide industry critical of endocrine disruptors criteria

The pesticide industry is “extremely disappointed” with the European Commission’s proposal to identify endocrine disruptors that was presented on Wednesday (15 June).

Concerns

The US said that all the countries present at the meeting had concerns about the EU evaluation criteria for endocrine disruptors, “in particular their impact on import tolerances”.

Canada’s ambassador said the EU was “moving away from scientific risk assessment and thus breaching” World Trade Organisation obligations.

Commissioner Andriukaitis told the ambassadors that the precautionary method was enshrined in EU law and that the Commission “has no possibility to deviate from this approach”.

But Commission officials pointed to two derogations – exceptions – in the legislation, which it had put forward the previous month.

The two draft legal acts which set the criteria to identify endocrine disruptors are under the Biocidal Products Regulation and one draft Commission Regulation under the Plant Protection Products Regulation.

They call for the establishment of MRLs (maximum residual levels) of pesticides in agricultural goods. But the approach used to set the MRL is the risk-based approach favoured by the US and Canada.

A Commission official “clarified that [the] proposal foresees possibility to establish MRLs, which should be accepted as an ambitious proposal to address the concerns expressed by the ambassadors”.

EU criteria on endocrine disruptors insufficient, warns chemical industry

The European Commission’s draft criteria for identifying endocrine disruptors in pesticides and biocides are “not sufficient” to protect people and the environment, the European chemical industry has warned.

Trade

The different treatment matters because of the free trade deals the EU is hoping to strike. To secure the tariff-free agreement, the EU and a prospective free trade partner can agree to recognise each other’s health and environment standards as equivalent.

While this ‘regulatory cooperation’ removes barriers to trade, it has led to accusations from civil society and some politicians that deals such as TTIP would lower European protection standards, which the Commission has repeatedly denied.

ClientEarth lawyer Laurens Ankersmit said, “The Commission’s willingness to address Canadian trade concerns is a perfect example of the dangers of so-called regulatory cooperation in the EU-Canada trade deal.”

The meeting took place about a month after the Commission presented the long-awaited criteria for identifying substances with endocrine disrupting properties of plant protection products and biocides in June 2016.

Once adopted by the European Parliament and Council, the EU regulatory system will be the first worldwide to define scientific criteria for endocrine disruptors in legislation.

Illegal pesticide contamination of food imports on the rise

A European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) report has warned that 6.5% of food imports from third countries contain pesticide residue that exceeds the EU’s maximum permitted level. EURACTIV Spain reports.

Commission defends derogations

The Commission told euractiv.com that the precautionary principle was fully maintained in the Biocidal Products Regulation and the Plant Protection Products Regulation. The criteria proposed in June do not change that, a spokesman said.

The precautionary principle was the logical approach when there was incomplete information or scientific uncertainty, he said, but its use should be revised when new scientific information becomes available.

The changes to the existing derogations took current technical and scientific knowledge into account, the spokesman said.

“By applying derogations based on “negligible risk from exposure” instead of “negligible exposure” alone, EU decisions would be based upon more comprehensive scientific information,” the spokesman said.

This will ensure highly hazardous substances can not be approved under the derogation even if the exposure is negligible, he added. This method is already included in the Biocidal Products Regulation, which was adopted in 2012.

“EU scientific bodies, including the European Food Safety Authority, concluded in 2013 that endocrine disruptors may be subject to risk assessment, thus confirming that this derogation is possible to apply,” the spokesman said.

Giovanni La Via, the chair of the European Parliament’s Environment Committee, wrote to Andriukaitis in September after taking advice from Parliament lawyers. He said the Commission had overstretched its powers in drafting the legal acts, which Andriukaitis disagreed with.

Commission’s endocrine disruptor plan is illegal, inadequate and woefully late

European Commission draft rules to identify and ultimately ban endocrine disrupters are illegal because they clash with existing pesticide and biocide regulations, Alice Bernard writes. The environmental lawyer warned that EU judges could throw out the changes to the long-awaited scientific criteria for the chemicals.

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Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that can have harmful effects on the body's endocrine (hormone) system. They interfere with natural hormone systems, and the health effects can be felt long after the exposure has stopped. These chemical substances are present in a large number of everyday products: foods, cleaning products, food containers, etc.

Exposure to endocrine disruptors in the womb can have life-long effects and can even have consequences for the next generation.

The European Commission was supposed to define test criteria for potential endocrine disruptors by December 2013.

In June 2016, the EU executive finally presented a long-awaited science-based set of criteria for identifying substances with endocrine disrupting properties of plant protection products and biocides.

Once adopted, the EU regulatory system will be the first worldwide to define scientific criteria for endocrine disruptors in legislation.

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