January 29 2004
New WWF Report Finds Wildlife and Humans at Risk from Commonly Used
Chemicals
Tina Skaar,
Communications Officer,World Wildlife Fund US
Washington, DC - Seals, whales, falcons, and polar bears are among a
range
of wildlife at risk from chemicals used in common consumer products,
according to a World Wildlife Fund (WWF) analysis of recent scientific
evidence on contamination of wildlife and people.
"Products we use every day contain chemicals that can have serious
wildlife
and human health effects," said Clifton Curtis, director of WWF's Global
Toxics Program. "Mounting scientific research is documenting the extent
of
our exposure to these chemicals."
The WWF report Causes for Concern: Chemicals and Wildlife, highlights
perfluorinated compounds, phthalates, phenolic compounds and brominated
flame retardants (BFRs) as the most prominent new toxic hazards.
Perfluorinated compounds are used in the production of textiles, food
packaging and non-stick coatings such as Teflon, while phthalates can be
found in plastics (including PVC), phenolic compounds in food cans,
plastic
bottles and computer shells, and BFRs in furniture and TVs. While
contamination of animals and humans by harmful chemicals such as DDT and
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) has been widely documented, the dangers
of
many chemicals still on the market - and recently studied - are
increasingly
clear.
According to the report, these toxic compounds can cause severe health
disorders such as cancer, damage to the immune system, behavioral
problems,
hormone disruption, or even feminization. A wide range of animals are
contaminated. Scientists have found perfluorinated compounds -
classified as
cancer-causing chemicals by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency -
in
dolphins, whales and cormorants in the Mediterranean, seals and sea
eagles
in the Baltic, and polar bears. Exposure to bisphenol A has resulted in
sex
reversals in broad-snouted caiman, an alligator relative native to South
America; and BFRs have been found in sperm whales and seals in the
Canadian
Arctic, and recently discovered in the eggs of peregrine falcons.
Existing regulation to protect wildlife and people from these harmful
chemicals is ineffective, according to WWF. However, the European Union
(EU)
is currently considering legislation that would fundamentally change the
way
chemicals are managed. The law, known as REACH (Registration, Evaluation
and
Authorization of Chemicals), would require manufacturers and importers
to
provide safety information on the 30,000 or so industrial chemicals
annually
marketed in Europe. WWF has launched an international DetoX Campaign to
push
for the adoption and strengthening of REACH.
"Future dangers will only be averted if the effects of chemicals are
exposed
and then the dangerous ones are never used," said Curtis. "Perfluorinated
compounds are a perfect example of the need of REACH. Manufacturers like
3M
and DuPont conducted research on these substances for 30 years but they
were
not willing to share the results. REACH would not allow that."
WWF's report warns there is also continuing evidence of widespread
contamination of animals, people and the environment by chemicals that
are
now banned or restricted (PCBs, DDT compounds, tributyltin). According
to
WWF, this ongoing contamination demonstrates how persistent these
substances
are and why it is important to prevent newer-generation chemicals from
accumulating in the environment and leaving a similar legacy.
WWF stresses that the precautionary principle is indispensable to reduce
the
risks posed by past and current chemicals. Embracing this principle,
REACH
also responds to the lack of safety information on chemicals on the
market,
the conservation organization says.
"We know that the global production of chemicals is increasing, and at
the
same time we have warning signals that a variety of troubling threats to
wildlife and human health are becoming more prevalent," adds Clifton
Curtis.
"It is reckless to suggest there is no link between the two, and give
chemicals the benefit of the doubt."
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