NATIONS PREPARE TO IMPLEMENT REACH - C&EN Global

Oct 25, 2004 - The conference was hosted by the European Commission, the administrative arm of the EU, in cooperation with the Austrian Ministry of Ag...
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BUSINESS PANEUROPEAN Hungary'sCsobod (left) and Slovenia's Mehic are proud to work with Western European counterparts to develop REACH.

INTERNATIONAL

NATIONS PREPARE TO IMPLEMENT REACH EU's new members compare notes on readiness for new regulatory policy for chemical industry PATRICIA L. SHORT, C&EN LONDON

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25 European Union member countries will face common challenges in making the REACH system work successfully, it is also undeniable that the 10 new members will have to simultaneously address a num­ ber ofparticular difficulties and disadvan­ tages in preparing for and implementing REACH." So observed Martin Seychell, head of the chemicals directorate of the Malta Standards Authority, part of that country's Ministry for Competition & Communications. Seychell was one of the speakers at the Conference on the New European Chem­ icals Policy within the Enlarged Union, held last month in Vienna. The confer­ ence was hosted by the European Com­ mission, the administrative arm of the EU, in cooperation with the Austrian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry Environment & Water Management and the Austrian En­ vironmental Office. It was also promoted by the European Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC). REACH—the system for Registration, Evaluation & Authorization of Chemi­ cals—is one of the most attention-con­ 28

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suming sets oflaws currently facing the EU. T h e law's rationale is to supersede the plethora ofchemical registration plans that exist in the different EU member countries by bringing regulation into one program. Introduced in a discussion paper early in 2001, the lawwas prepared in draft form by the E C a year ago and then submitted to the European Council of Ministers and the Euro­ pean Parliament for dis­ cussion and amendment. Legislative work on R E A C H has b e e n temporarily suspended while the Parliament— newly elected this sum­ mer— is occupied by in­ terviewing candidates for commissioners, who take up their posts in November for five-year terms. As inter­ views with commissioner appointees wrapped up earlier this month, the three candidates whose directorates touch up­ on REACH—Markos Kyprianou, com­ missioner-designate for health and con­ sumer protection; Gunter Verheugen, for enterprise and industry; and Stavros Di-

mas, for environment—each promised to support REACH. Completion of the first reading of the draft proposal in the Parliament is not en­ visaged this year, many delegates at the conference agreed, but is expected early next year. Despite the delays, the EC and the national regulatory agencies that ad­ dress chemicals are hard at work on REACH'S implementation. And the mag­ ic words that kept occurring at the con­ ference echo the Boy and Girl Scout mot­ to: "Be Prepared." "The successful implementation of REACH requires a simultaneous effort by public authorities and by industry" Seychell said. "In Malta, we are convinced that it is the degree of preparedness that will make the difference as to whether REACH trans­ lates into a burden or an opportunity" The new member countries face con­ siderable disadvantages in adopting REACH, he agreed, but on the other hand, they may have an advantage or two as well. "In a sense, REACH could not have come at a better time," Seychell explained. "Un­ like what happened during the adoption of the acquis communitaire"—the massive collection of EU laws and regulations that the new members had to transpose into their own legal systems—"we are no longer trying to catch up with the other member countries. REACH will require changes from all parties, and it may well be that the attitude in the new countries is more favorable to accepting change." He was supported by Semira Mehic, a chemi­ cal inspector with Slo­ venia's National Chem­ icals Bureau (NCB), who added that she could see problems with resources that the new member countries will face. Her bureau deals with both legislation and enforce­ m e n t for a variety of products: biocides, plant protection chemicals, and dangerous products. "We are in the final phase of the EU transposition process, with implementa­ tion in progress. This took a great deal of time and human resources," she pointed out. "It has been a gradual inclusion in the ongoing integration into the EU This is

"It is the degree of preparedness that will make the difference as to whether REACH translates into a burden or an opportunity."

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complex, and we have little experience— and no practical experience. NCB was chosen as the authority that will be responsible for REACH, based on existing national infrastructure. But we have only 25 people, including technical support," with little prospect of that number being significantly increased. THAT IS ONE REASON, she added, that her bureau supports a strong European Chemicals Agency (ECA) to coordinate all national REACH activities. Jerzy Majka, head of the Bureau for Chemical Substances & Preparations in Poland's Ministry of Health, agreed that the early work— transposing EU laws into national systems—was extremely challenging to everyone concerned. After Poland's 1991 application to enter the EU, Majka said, the country "heard seven years of silence. But we began in 1993 to work in cooperation with Sweden's chemical regulatory authorities" on a regulatory scheme. "By 1998, regulations came into force in Poland that enabled the Ministry of Health to require data sheets and similar registration materials. These were a total shock to people— What is our stupid government doing now?' they asked." But the result, he noted, was that industry began coming to grips with EUcompliant regulations. It quickly became clear, he said, that REACH would become one of the most important issues for the competent authorities—those agencies responsible for implementing it. Majka sees a need for changes to REACH, as now proposed, to "make it more friendly for small to medium-sized enterprises and for companies with less expertise, as they would be able to rely on the experience of larger enterprises, particularly with the costs of development of the necessary information." Poland will support involvement of ECAin preparing guidance for sharing data, he said. "We support a stronger agency, although we recognize the political problems," since national authorities would have to cede some power. Majka also mentioned the "OSOR" proposal, which emerged this summer from the U.K. and Hungary and calls for "one substance, one registration."This proposal "is most important for us," agreed Karel Blâha, a chemical regulator in the Department of Environmental Risks in Prague's Ministry of Environment. The proposal aims to make registration more effective and less expensive by avoiding repetition of testing by numerous com-

panies, adjusting rules for submitting core data, and dealing with potential future registrants. Blâha said his agency's analysis is that it could save $150,000 per substance being registered. The UK. and Hungarian delegations had proposed their OSORpian to the EC's Competitiveness Council this spring. Country delegations found the concept interesting but problematic, and requested the two countries come back after a rethink. Accordingly, in July, the U.K. and

Hungary sent a revised proposal to the Competitiveness Council. "One substance, one registration," the proposal argues, "will be good for business, minimizing overall costs and bureaucracy, and encouraging transparency; good for human health and the environment, creating consistency and high standards across Europe; and good for animal welfare, avoiding duplication of animal testing." The UK.'s Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) es-

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BUSINESS timated that the total direct cost to EU industry of a system with complete data sharing would be roughly $4.2 billion, compared with more than $ 13 billion resulting from only 25% data sharing. According to a spokeswoman for DEFRA, "We will seek the inclusion of as many elements of OSOR as possible during the Dutch presidency as, after this, the council will move on to other aspects ofREACH." Blâha pointed out that the original proposal called for mandatory company sharing of all data required for registration, but that this has been modified to call for only "core data"—primarily that of hazards, rather than exposure, usage, and so on. "THE VALUE of the data is not commercial—it is necessary for the next step of risk management," he noted, but added that there "must then be some concept of recompense for those generating the data, with creation of an ombudsman for possible disputable cases, for new data or new chemicals in particular." The Association of Chemical Industry of the Czech Republic has agreed to take part in a study supported by the EC and by industry, which is represented by CEFIC and the EU-wide employers' federation UNI CE, Blâha said. And other studies, including an impact assessment on branches of the Czech economy that will be affected by REACH—including automobiles, textiles, and paper—are planned or under way Some of the studies will be carried out as SPORT— Strategic Partnership on

REACHTesting—exercises. This program was developed by CEFIC, which maintains its secretariat, along with national authorities and the EC (C&EN,July 19, page 6). These projects test the workability of REACH and identify solutions where problems are found. The exercises will involve manufacturers and importers as well as downstream users, and they will be facilitated by independent consultants, explained Thomas

Karhu

Blaha

Jostmann, CEFIC director responsible for the SPORT program. They will supplement work that the EC itself is supervising through its REACH Implementation Projects (RIPs). On Sept. 15, the SPORT steering group decided on nine projects and put together registration dossiers. Among them are the investigation ofmethanesulfonyl chloride, in a team led by Atofina and French authorities; disodium 4,5-dihydroxy-benzene-l,3-disulfonate, led by Fuji and

Finnish and Dutch authorities; and a category of propylene glycol «-butyl ethers, led by Dow Chemical and Swedish and French authorities. Jostmann was one of few industry representatives at the Vienna conference. And for the chemical industry, it was a relatively stern audience. Most of the delegates represented regulatory authorities in the new countries or were from environmental groups such as the World

Majka

Wildlife Fund (WWF) International and the Regional Environmental Center, giving the conference a decidedly "green" atmosphere. For these delegates, the question about REACH was not "if" but "When?" and "How much?" Josef Prôll, Austria's minister for agriculture, forestry, environment, and water management, opened the conference, reflecting Austria's geopolitically pivotal role in Central Europe. He addressed the fre-

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quent complaint about t h e costs of REACH: "Current legislation is not for free. The baseline for calculating additional costs of REACH is compliance with current legislation. "If the EU member countries would fully comply with existing chemical legislation, the gap between existing legislation and REACH would be narrowed down dramatically," he argued. Prôll also contended that potential benefits of the REACH system are being increasingly demonstrated with substitution of high-risk chemicals by innovative products and technologies. In fact, "REACH is good for industry," agreed MichaelWarhurst, director for EU toxics policy in the European policy office of W W F . "The environmental benefits of REACH are currently ignored, but clearly these will be significant," he said, ticking some off. "There will be new markets for safer and more environmentally friendly products. It will be easier for new products being introduced, as the need for new, safer products encourages R&D. It will be a more predictable regulatory system, which will enable better planning by companies. It will reduce risks of liability And it will help restore trust in the industry," he argued. "THE ECONOMY is flexible-if there are restrictions, people do other things," he added. Eva Csobod, a director of the Hungarian branch of the Regional Environmental Center, near Budapest, agreed that a successful REACH program will help restore a chemical industry image that is badly battered. "What we need is 'greeri chemistry for healthy markets with safer chemicals," she said. "REACH will improve knowledge and confidence of the public in chemicals." Her organization's position, she noted, is that REACH should resolve problems with regulations, data gaps, and poor safety data of chemicals. "Now that we are part ofthe EU, we can participate in discussions on REACH, to enable national dialogue and public awareness." In fact, she added, "we are proud that old and new countries can work together— for example, the U.K.Hungarian proposal." One of the points that the UK.-Hungarian OSORproposal acknowledged was the potential problem of language in the operation of REACH. And language is not a theoretical problem, Poland's Majka pointed out. "It is a saving of time ifyou have standard phrases," he conceded. "But you must remém-

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BUSINESS March 2 0 0 6 ; a transition period from April 2006 to September 2007, when cur­ rent legislation is repealed; and the opera­ tional period from October 2007 onward, by which time ECA will be functioning. "The interim phase provides a frame­ work for arriving at a balance between im­ plementation of current legislation and preparing for REACH," she said. "We just can't sit and do nothing." REACH, Sand­ berg pointed out, will be a regulation, com­ ing into effect 20 days after publication in the official EU journal. The EC is funding six categories of RIPs, with subprojects, she explained. The six categories cover process description of how the system functions; informatics; guidance documents and training materi­ al t o assist industry in preparing for REACH; guidance and procedures on technical and adrninistrative issues, such as dossier evaluation; transformation of current structures to those needed for the new legislation; and development of ad­ ministrative routines and organizational structures for ECA. ' M these RIPs are out for tender," Sand­ berg said. In fact, Jostmann said, CEFIC

ber, languages have different structure. We need to try to develop standard phrases, particularly for, say risk and safety If you just use a computer program, it is a tragedy For example, since May we have had EU phrases for pesticide registrations. I don't know who did the translations, but in Pol­ ish, they are not understandable," he com­ plained. "REACH is a very complicated legislation, so any proposal to simplify it will be very welcome." Simplification, through amendments to the draft REACH plan, will be the re­ sponsibility of the European Council of Ministers and the Parliament. The EC, on the other hand, is concerned with making the plan work. The EC sent to the conference special­ ists from two directorates—Eva Sandberg, chemical policy specialist at the Environ­ ment Directorate, and Elina Karhu, in the Enterprise Directorate—to report on the commission's work to ready national au­ thorities for REACH. As Sandberg pointed out, an interim strategy has already started, based on a three-phase timeline: an interim period that began last November and runs to

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is bidding to conduct three projects: two regarding guidance of chemical safety re­ ports and one regarding guidance on in­ formation requirements. Karhu described t h e registration dossiers and enhanced safety data sheets that will supersede the current safety data sheet requirements. "Manufacturers and importers already have current obligations to comply with restrictions on manufac­ turing and use, on classifications and la­ beling of substances, so there is no reason just to sit and wait," she emphasized. "REACH places some new obligations on industry that is clear," she said, so com­ panies have time to do the preparatory work. "Check what are the obligations. Start data assessment—generate this in time. Strengthen communication with suppliers and customers. Are consortiums a good option? If so, find partners. Unpreparedness will have a heavy cost," she cau­ tioned. "Prepare now to eliminate those costs." Malta's Seychell added: "No one is ready for REACH, although some are in a bet­ ter position than others. REACH will hap­ pen—it's time to be preparing." •

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