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News Releases


No. 125/05
December 14, 2005
REACH: EU TAKES MAJOR STEP IN AGREEING NEW EU CHEMICAL LEGISLATION
The European Commission welcomes the EU Council’s political
agreement on
REACH [Registration, Evaluation and
Authorisation of Chemicals] that will radically change chemical
legislation. Over the coming years, information will
become available on possible risks of about 30,000
substances that are currently on the market.
Commissioner
Stavros Dimas (pictured below) responsible for
environment
policy said: "This agreement will represent a marked
improvement in the protection of health and the
environment. It will reduce chemical related disease and
will allow users and consumers to make informed choices
about the substances they come in contact with. It will
also encourage innovation and give a strong incentive to
industry to replace dangerous chemicals with safer ones.
Today’s agreement presents to our citizens a chance for
a healthier life and a safer environment."
Commission Vice President
Günter Verheugen
(pictured at left) responsible
for
enterprise and industry policy said:
"This agreement
puts an end to a long period of uncertainty for industry
and helps them plan for the very challenging task of
meeting the new requirements. The Council’s agreement is
a reasonable compromise. We have succeeded in making
REACH more effective and more workable. And we have
succeeded in maintaining the competitiveness of EU
industry and – a crucial point- reducing the burden for
small and medium-sized companies."
REACH stands for Registration, Evaluation and
Authorisation of Chemicals. This new EU regulation will
replace 40 existing legal acts and create a single
system for all chemical substances. It will introduce a
new European Chemicals Agency to be established in
Helsinki, Finland, which will manage the registration of
substances, through the setting up of a database. It
will play an important role also in the evaluation and
authorisation of substances.
The new system will establish an integrated system for
the registration, evaluation, authorisation and
restriction of chemicals. REACH will ensure that the
gaps in existing information on the hazardous properties
of some 30,000 chemicals are filled. It will provide
companies, workers and consumers with the necessary
information on the safe use of substances and see to it
that these data are transmitted
along the industrial supply chain--leading to reduced
risks for workers, for consumers and for the
environment. REACH will reverse the burden of proof so
that industry, both producers and importers of
substances, rather than the public authorities, will
have to assume greater responsibility for providing the
necessary information and taking effective risk
management measures.
REACH will require manufacturers and importers to gather
comprehensive information on properties of their
substances produced or imported in volumes over 1 ton
per year and to submit the necessary information to
demonstrate their safe use in a registration dossier to
the European Chemicals Agency. Failure to register will
mean the substance cannot be manufactured or imported to
the EU market. One of the big steps forward in REACH is
that a lot of this information will be freely available
to the public over the internet so that people can make
informed decisions on the chemicals they use and
products they buy.
Member States’ public authorities will examine
registration dossiers and substances of concern. They
will also scrutinise all proposals for animal testing to
keep it to the minimum absolutely necessary.
Use-specific authorisations will be required for
chemicals that cause cancer, mutations or reproduction
problems, or that accumulate in our bodies and in the
environment. Authorisation will be granted only to
companies that can show that the risks are adequately
controlled or if social and economic benefits outweigh
the risks and suitable alternative substances do not
exist. This will encourage substitution of unsafe
substances by safer ones.
Existing system not working
REACH will improve the current EU
chemicals legislation,
which distinguishes between so-called "existing" and
"new" chemicals. All chemicals that were put on the
market before 1981 are called "existing" chemicals. They
amount to around 100,000. Chemicals introduced after
1981 (around 4,300) are called "new" chemicals. While
new chemicals have to be tested, there are no systematic
provisions for the existing substances. Consequently, in
volume terms, safety information is sketchy for around
99% of these existing chemicals.
As national competent authorities are responsible for
the risk assessment of new chemicals, the process is
slow, cumbersome and resource-intensive. For example,
since 1993, 140 high-volume chemicals have been singled
out for risk assessment, of which only a very limited
number have completed the process. In addition, the
existing system discourages the introduction of new and
possibly safer chemicals – thereby giving no incentives
for innovation.
Next steps
The formal Common Position of the Council should be
approved under the EU Austrian
Presidency in May 2006, a
step that will pave the way for the second reading of
the proposal by the
European Parliament. Parliament
adopted its first reading of REACH on 17 November. It is
expected that the final decision on REACH will be
reached by the European Parliament and Council in autumn
2006. The Commission expects entry into force of the
Regulation for spring 2007. Thereafter it will take
about a year for the REACH Agency to be operational.
Accordingly the operational requirements of REACH are
expected to start to be applied from 2008 onwards.
For further information, please visit:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/chemicals/reach.htm.

Further Contact Information
Press and Media Relations
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
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