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European Water Pollutants List Delayed One Year

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http://ens-news.com/ens/jan2003/2003-01-27-03.asp

 

 

European Water Pollutants List Delayed One Year

BRUSSELS, Belgium, January 27, 2003 (ENS) - European Commission proposals for a

definitive priority list of water pollutants under the European Union water

framework law will not emerge until the end of 2003 - a year after the deadline

set by governments and Members of the European Parliament.

Officials confirmed today that the Commission will publish its classification of

14 chemicals currently under review at the same time as a broader package of new

water quality objectives and emission standards intended to implement the law.

The classification was due last November, one year after publication of the

priority list.

Polluted water in England (Photo courtesy Freefoto)At stake is whether the

substances remain as priority substances or are classed as more dangerous

priority hazardous substances.

Priority substances will face tough restrictions under the directive but will

remain in circulation. Priority hazardous substances are to be phased out

entirely within 20 years.

Over one-third of the list's 32 substances have already been classed as priority

hazardous substances.

Last year, the European Chemicals Bureau said that of five substances from the

11 that it was investigating, only one should be a priority hazardous substance.

For the other six, the commission is awaiting recommendations from research

carried out under EU pesticide and biocide legislation. Its proposed

classification under that legislation will then be forwarded for adoption by the

Council of Ministers and European Parliament.

The commission warned it might overshoot the original deadline when the priority

list was adopted last year. Officials say the delay is needed to ensure its

proposals are founded on good science. They also stress that approval of the

broader water quality package will be required for the final classification to

bite.

Firms that produce the substances in question disagree. Rocky Rowe of Dow

Agrosciences, which produces two substances under review - pesticides

Chlorpyrifos and Trifluralin - said the delay was disrupting business planning.

" We can't do anything until we know what that proposal is, " he told reporters

today.

The delay also complicates Dow's legal action against the European Union, in

which the firm is trying to overturn the inclusion of the substances on the

priority list in the first place. If the commission decides they should remain

as priority substances - and therefore not subject to an eventual phaseout - it

could be tempted to drop the case.

 

{Published in cooperation with ENDS Environment Daily, Europe's choice for

environmental news. Environmental Data Services Ltd, London. Email:

envdaily}

 

 

 

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Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2003.

 

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