The program, known as REACH—for the Registration, Evaluation and Authorization of Chemicals—would require companies to register more than 30,000 chemicals, the vast majority of which are already on the market. Some chemicals would also have to undergo an evaluation and authorization processes, which can lead to bans and other restrictions.
This week, the Parliament’s environment committee approved the legislation after rejecting industry attempts to allow companies to use data they produced for similar regulations at the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development as well as the Environmental Protection Agency. In addition, the committee approved the so-called substitution principle, which will demand that firms eliminate allegedly dangerous chemicals if there are substitutes.
Industry has continually tried to make REACH a more reasonable program, but unfortunately been unsuccessful. “The problem,” noted Logomasini, “is that REACH is inherently unreasonable; it cannot be fixed because the concept if fundamentally flawed. Industry would be wiser to fight the entire program rather than try to make it less painful. Implementing REACH will cost
For more information see Europe’s Global REACH: Costly for the World; Suicidal for Europe and the 2006 update: Still Overreaching at www.fahayek.org.




