13/12/2005
- A toxic family met today with EU ministers attending the
Competitiveness Council and handed out a symbolic ‘gift’
and a letter signed by WWF compelling them to vote for a
strong REACH. Environment Ministers
from Sweden, Lena Sommestad, and Denmark, Connie Hedegaard,
accepted the gifts –X shaped biscuits- and letters from
the son of the toxic family and the Director of WWF’s
DetoX Campaign, Karl Wagner.
WWF believes that only if Member States
take a firm stance on authorisation will REACH deliver
a substantial improvement compared to the current EU chemicals
policy. If too many loopholes are established, the new
legislation might even turn into a threat for human health
and the environment. Aware of this risk, the toxic family
and WWF called on Member States to ensure that the original
aim of REACH is accomplished, that is to effectively protect
wildlife and people from the threat of hazardous chemicals
Outside the Council building, two
40 meters banners displaying the message “strong REACH
= healthy future” caught the attention of the passers
by, who were also curious to meet the members of the toxic
family. Pushing a 3 meter tall shopping trolley up and
down the Schuman area, the father, mother, child and dog
of the family voiced their concerns about toxic chemicals
in the products and environment surrounding us.
As WWF’s recently released ‘Generations
X’ study showed, we are all contaminated with a cocktail
of persistent, bio-accumulative and toxic man-made chemicals.
They are found in everyday consumer products from carpets,
clothes and non-stick cooking pans, to computers and baby
bottles.
To stop the growing toxic chemical
threat, it is essential that the Council agrees to substitute
hazardous chemicals with safer alternatives whenever possible.
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