Guest guest Posted December 11, 2008 Report Share Posted December 11, 2008 To all European Citizens in Alternative Answers  Our health must be protected by removing the most toxic chemicals from our homes and the environment. There are concerns that this cannot be achieved with current testing procedures, and that food additives and household products in particular are not being tested to the highest standards. The latest alternative techniques based on human biology are being ignored. As a consequence we fail to fully understand how the chemicals we use everyday react with the human body and their detrimental effect on the environment.  The Environment and New European Legislation  At the start of November the European Commission published its proposal for the revision of directive 86/609 which controls all animal experiments. Since the directive was written in 1986 many Member States have passed their own national laws with varying standards. The review intends to unify these standards and include the latest technology. The Commission responded to demands to promote the validation of alternatives with an intention to set up research facilities for this purpose. This is especially relevant to the protection of our rivers, countryside, cities and homes because most new regulated alternatives are for toxicity testing of chemicals. It must be done soon if we are to stop releasing toxic substances into our environment.  The Environment and the testing of thousands of chemicals  The current European chemical testing policy, called REACH, came into full effect on 1st June. Some 30,000 chemicals in general use by the public (acids, solvents, glues etc) have to be pre-registered at the European Chemicals Agency by 1st December 2008. This is to access their toxicity and will mean millions of more animal tests. The European Commission have estimated that REACH will cost industry up to 5.2bn euros over the next eleven years. They defend the huge cost by saying it is an investment to protect human health and to control the most toxic chemicals. This defense may not be justified if the testing methods used are not the latest technology based on human biology. Many such procedures to test chemicals exist and are already being used in industry. Some are awaiting validation and regulatory acceptance. A commitment in Europe to make medical progress a priority is needed to validate more alternatives to test chemicals.  Approximately a million animals are used every year in Europe to test chemicals. But the testing methods used do not reflect today's scientific progress. Technologies such as In Vitro (cell culture), bioinformatics, genomics and in silico (computer-based) systems offer alternatives which are quicker, cheaper and more reliable than animal tests but are being ignored. The criterion necessary to validate alternatives are strict and comprehensive. However, the Commission's Regulation 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 criticised by MEPs as encouraging companies to continue using animal tests that have remained unchanged for decades. The commission must do better and regulate approved and validated alternatives as soon as they are available.  Evidence considered by the Dr Hadwen Trust concludes that the testing of thousands of chemicals with animal tests is impractical due to the massive number of combinations required to produce realistic exposure scenarios. However, modern procedures such as In Vitro should make this possible. Cutting-edge research is developing this technique with automated machines to screen thousands of compounds a day. By using human cells reliability is also improved because there is no complication of species differences. This demonstrates that traditional animal testing can be eliminated with emphasis on more efficient modern alternatives.  Alternative Technology to Safeguard our Food and our Health  In the UK alone over 6,400 animals were used to test biotoxins in shellfish and other marine life in 2004. The European Food Safety Authority released an October 8th report from its scientific panel evaluating the safety testing of biotoxins. It concluded that regulated animal testing was not sufficiently sensitive to detect these biotoxins to protect human health. It supported analytical methods such as mass spectrometry as an improvement for their detection. These methods are already being used in Germany for detection of marine biotoxins, where scientists have responded to criticism with evidence that supports this approach as superior to animal testing. The Federal Institute for Risk Assessment are now calling for European law to endorse analytical methods as the regulated and preferred procedures to detect marine biotoxins. Also, researchers in Spain have developed In Vitro techniques to detect marine biotoxins and have expressed confidence that they provide improved results.  To satisfy the REACH regulations chemicals can be tested now with alternative technology, in the many cases when it has shown to be superior. When more investment is needed to develop these alternatives this must be made available. This issue needs to be resolved when the revision of Directive 86/609 is discussed in parliament. Europeans who agree this is urgent can contact their MEPs and tell them so.  Further information from http://www.eceae.org http://www.alttox.org/  Thank you for your time,  T. Gallett from London, England  Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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