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Explore the issues

 

 Health threats

 Cutting the risk

 Safer future

 

What is REACH?

 

REACH in 2008

REACH Explained
My Voice: A Consumer Guide
How you can demand better protection of human health and the environmnent from hazardous chemicals

Navigating REACH
An activists' guide to using and improving the new EU chemicals legislation

More background on REACH

 

National campaigns

 
Links to campaign pages across the EU
  

Events


"Think about REACH while on the BEACH..." - Call to MEPs to think about - and improve - the new chemicals policy over the summer break.
(12 July 2006, European Parliament, Brussels)

"Don't dwarf REACH"- 100 garden gnomes accompanied by Friends of the Earth activists gathered by the European Parliament
(15 November 2005, Strasbourg)
  
100 gnomes carrying toxic symbols gathered by the European institutions

(04 October 2005, Brussels)

Toxic Ted and participants in our "REACH made easy" seminar
(January 2005)
    

Useful links

Chemical Reaction

European Environmental Bureau

Greenpeace European Unit

HEAL

Pesticide Watch

WECF nesting project

WWF EPO

What are the health threats?

We are all carrying dozens of chemicals in our bodies that were not in the bodies of our great-grandparents. Many of these chemicals have been linked with illnesses such as testicular cancer and prostate cancer, which are both on the increase. The effects of hundreds of others is not yet fully understood.

Did you know?

Our bodies are now contaminated with more than 300 man-made chemicals.

We think that chemicals that build up in our bodies should be phased out.

Double jeopardy

The most worrying types of chemicals are those which are hormone disrupters and/or which can build up inside in the human body. Friends of the Earth thinks these chemicals should be phased out and replaced with safer alternatives.

Hormone disrupters

What the experts say:
"Humans are exposed daily to chemicals that have been shown, or suggested, to have hormone-disrupting properties". "Despite the uncertainty, it is prudent to minimise the exposure to humans, especially pregnant women, to endocrine [hormone] disrupting chemicals" - The UK's Royal Society report June 2000

Professor Patrick Bateson
Chair of the Royal Society's working group on hormone disrupting chemicals

Hormone disrupters interfere with our body's hormones. Our hormones regulate our day-to-day bodily functions and are vital for making sure we grow up healthy.

Bio-accumulation

Some chemicals that we can't break down properly will accumulate in the body's tissues. This is known as bio-accumulation.

The risk with these chemicals is that it's not known what the long term effects of some of them might be and we would be unable to remove them from our bodies and environment if they were found to be harmful.

So what can you do now to reduce the risk? One thing you can do is to try to avoid coming into contact with risky chemicals - ultimately, though, we will only be protected by tighter laws.

Cutting the risk

 

Press releases


24 July 2008
Consumers left at risk as EFSA ignores scientific consensus on Bisphenol A

10 July 2008
NEW REPORT: Regulators shirking responsibility on Bisphenol A - Harmful chemical should be regulated under REACH

27 May 2008
New European Chemicals Agency must act on hazardous chemicals

more      

Briefings

Notes on the European Commission's proposal to create Multi--National Authorisation Zones under COM
 

Letters

Open letter to Commissioners Dimas and Verheugen with recommendations for REACH's reviews and for the new Chemicals Agency

Letter to MEPs regarding a cynical advert by CEFIC in the European Voice (November 2006)
Original CEFIC Ad
FoEE spoof of CEFIC ad

more


 
 

Publications

 

 Bisphenol A in plastics: is it making us sick? A consumer guide to Bisphenol A

Blissfully unaware of Bisphenol A: Reasons why regulators should live up to their responsibilities A comprehensive review of the scientific knowledge available
regarding controversial Bisphenol A

more

To receive a hard copy of any of these publications please contact info@foeeurope.org

 

 

         

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