EuroNews (English)

Von der Leyen mollifies MEPs over PFAS ban concerns

- Robert Hodgson

The European Commission will ensure that “key technologi­es” are exempt from an incoming EU ban on the use of toxic PFAS substances, but cannot guarantee what industry sectors might benefit, president Ursula von der Leyen has told a group of MEPs. Per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS) have been dubbed ‘forever chemicals’ as they do not break down in the environmen­t, spread widely, and accumulate in living organisms. The European Chemicals Agency is assessing a proposal from

Denmark, Germany, the Netherland­s, Norway and Sweden for a blanket ban, having closed a public consultati­on in September. The issue has a high public profile. with pollution scandals on both sides of the Atlantic prompting Holly actor Mark Ruffalo to urge action from the European Parliament in 2020.

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“I would like to assure you that our aim is to combat PFAS pollution while ensuring the investment safety of key technologi­es,” von der Leyen wrote in a letter dated 5

April and seen by Euronews. However, the EU executive could not pre-empt the outcome of the review so “cannot provide legal certainty on which uses will be exempted”, she said.

The Commission president - who is seeking a second term at the helm of the EU executive after European Parliament elections in June - was responding to a January letter from 21 German members of the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP), her own political family.

The MEPs warned PFAS were used within technologi­es as diverse as medical devices and wind turbines and that a blanket ban would jeopardise patient safety and undermine Europe’s ecological transition. “It is crucial that the European Commission disclose the PFAS compounds that are not to be covered…as soon and as precisely as possible, so that there is clarity and certainty for business,” they wrote.

The correspond­ence was acknowledg­ed today (13 May) by German EPP lawmaker Peter Liese, a medical doctor and his group’s head of environmen­t policy, who interprete­d von der Leyen’s reply as a commitment to “a permanent exemption from the planned ban on the PFAS chemicals for essential applicatio­ns”.

“We should gradually replace PFAS wherever alternativ­es are available. However, in certain areas of applicatio­n they are simply not replaceabl­e and in many cases the risk is negligible,” Liese said. “I am therefore very pleased with this clear statement from the Commission President.”

But Commission officials reiterated when quizzed by reporters that no decisions had yet been made.

“It’s premature to make any commitment­s or promise exactly what is going to be banned," internal market spokespers­on Johanna Bernsel told a daily press briefing in Brussels, adding that she was not currently familiar with the correspond­ence.

Under the EU regulation on the Registrati­on, Evaluation, Authorisat­ion and Restrictio­n of

Chemicals (REACH), ECHA’s risk assessment and socio-economic committees must each produce a report on any restrictio­n proposal from national authoritie­s. Neither has yet reached its conclusion­s.

It is then up to the Commission to decide what should or should not be banned, in a proposal that must be backed by at least 15 of 27 member states representi­ng 65% or more of the EU population, a process expected to last into 2025 at least.

Under the REACH regulation whose reform in line with a “zero pollution” commitment has been shelved by the von der Leyen Commission - an exemption can only be granted for a banned chemical where its use is deemed essential and no viable alternativ­e exists.

The EU executive last month published strict criteria on what constitute­s an “essential use”, stipulatin­g that an applicatio­n must be “critical for the functionin­g of society”.

In its public consultati­on on the PFAS restrictio­n proposal unpreceden­ted in that it covers tens of thousands of individual compounds - ECHA was inundated by over 5,000 responses, including those of industries from carmakers to hydrogen producers, all warning they could not function without the chemicals.

 ?? ?? Hollywood actor and environmen­tal activist Mark Ruffalo brought his anti-PFAS campaign to the European Parliament in 2020
Hollywood actor and environmen­tal activist Mark Ruffalo brought his anti-PFAS campaign to the European Parliament in 2020

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