Guest guest Posted November 13, 2008 Report Share Posted November 13, 2008 European Citizens in Ayurvedaonline An update on the long awaited revision of the European Directive on the protection of animals used in scientific experiments. For the last 6 years the views of national organizations researchers, companies and animal welfare groups have been considered. The result, a revised Directive 86/609 which became the formal proposed legislation of the European Commission on 5th November 2008. It has been forwarded to the European Parliament and the Council of Ministers and will follow the " co-decision " procedure where both must agree on the final content of the text before it can be made European law. It will then have a major impact in all countries in the European Union. It must be implemented with suitable national laws within a set timetable. It is hoped that the first reading in parliament will be before the European elections in June 2009. It is important that the final version represents our best interests. The commission have given the main reason for the review is to unify standards in Europe, many countries having passed their own national laws on animal experimentation since the directive was originally written. The proposal promises there will be ethical reviews of all animal experiments. However, an opportunity to quicken the replacement of animal tests with validated alternatives could be missed. In Europe today most alternatives are concerned with toxicity testing of chemicals. Because only 10% of animal testing is to test chemicals the Dr Hadwen Trust are asking for an EU Centre of Excellence to be set up to deal with promoting alternatives methods for all research. At this time European chemical companies are submitting testing data on over 30,000 chemicals to the European Chemicals Agency to comply with the regulations of the new European chemical testing policy called REACH. This is because prior to 1981, chemicals did not have to be safety tested as a legal requirement before being put on the market. The European Commission see the huge cost of REACH as justified because it will benefit Europeans by removing the most toxic chemicals from our society. This belief is valid provided the testing methods used are the best available. Validated alternatives are considered at least the equal of animal tests but the European Commission's list of approved methods does not include non-animal techniques that were approved for scientific validity in 2007 by the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods. This delay has been criticized by the European parliament MEPs because companies can continue to use animal tests when proven alternatives based on human biology are available. Citizens of Europe can help to make sure this does not happen by contacting their MEPS and insisting they support the use of validated alternatives as a legal requirement for the testing of chemicals. A report entitled Toxicity Testing in the Twenty-first Century: A Vision and a Strategy published by the US National Research Council in June 2008 makes it clear that the emphasis of toxicity testing of chemicals must shift from unwieldy animal studies to rapid, less expensive and more relevant tests using human cells. This makes the most of recent research into how damage occurs at the genetic and cellular level. A multitude of chemicals in the environment have not been thoroughly tested. Testing them all using existing animal tests, the report states, is unworkable due to the huge number of combinations of chemicals to produce realistic exposure scenarios. However, latest " high throughput " in vitro tests should make this possible. The report concludes that over time, the need for traditional animal testing should be greatly reduced and possibly even eliminated with emphasis on more efficient in vitro tests and computational techniques. In October 2008, in Berlin, Germany, a new vitro skin irritation test was discussed and endorsed by scientists as meeting the highest standards to successfully classify the toxicity of chemicals. It may be validated by the European Parliament in time for the ban on the testing of cosmetics ingredients on animals after 2009. It would also be an essential resource for the testing of all chemicals to comply with the EU REACH chemicals directive. This is the way our chemicals can be tested, using newly developed techniques when they are proven superior and more cost effective than conventional animal tests. The review of Directive 86/609 can help by making the replacement of animal tests with scientifically sound alternatives a priority. The European politicians must be made to realize how important this is. It is in the interest of all Europeans to contact their MEPs and ask them to promote alternative technology to test chemicals when the review of Directive 86/609 is debated in parliament. If you want to make a difference go to http://www.eceae.org/b_takeaction.php You can also help by telling all your friends and associates about the review of this important legislation. Thank You Tony from London, England Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.