EU promotes recycling toxic chemicals into new products which will ultimately be dumped as waste into developing countries
GENEVA, May 8, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- The EU has pushed dangerous cleanup standards for three toxic flame retardant chemicals widely used in building insulation, upholstery and electronics (HBCD, PentaBDE, and OctaBDE) at a UN meeting of chemicals treaties in Geneva, Switzerland. All three toxic chemicals are listed in the Stockholm Convention for global elimination. They are ubiquitous in the environment globally and can disrupt human hormone systems, creating potential adverse effects on the development of the nervous system and children's IQ.
African countries expressed deep concern regarding the EU proposal to recycle products containing toxic flame retardants into new products such as children's toys, food containers and soft furnishings.
"We do not want toxic chemicals recycled into toys for African children and we do not think EU children should be playing with them either," said Tadesse Amera, PAN Ethiopia. "The EU already sends us ewaste and now it seems they want to increase our toxic burden."
The EU proposal will allow toxic recycled products to be used by EU consumers and, then exported to developing countries as waste, transferring the toxic burden from richer countries to poor countries where the capacity to deal with contaminated waste is limited and where they will potentially add to health problems and hamper poverty reduction.
Ironically, the waste cleanup limit for PCBs and other substances already listed in the treaty is 20 times safer than the current EU proposal for flame retardants, despite the fact that they are all similarly toxic. Expert advisors to the EU noted that under the EU proposal, none of the current PentaBDE wastes would qualify for cleanup. The EU appears to be designing a standard to avoid cleanup actions on the world's most toxic chemicals.
Jindrich Petrlik from Arnika Association said, "As an EU-based public interest NGO we find it shameful to see the EU violating the integrity of the Stockholm Convention, and putting economic interests before human health and the environment. This is poisoning the circular economy."
IPEN is a global network of over 700 public interest organizations 100 countries working to eliminate toxic substances. www.ipen.org twitter: @ToxicsFree
Contacts:
Jindrich Petrlik, Arnika Association
jindrich.petrlik@arnika.org
+420 60 3582 98 4
Bjorn Beeler, IPEN
bjornbeeler@ipen.org
+46 3179 99 474
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