Recor­ding: Pla­ne­ta­ry Health Dia­lo­gue — The Health Risks of Pol­lu­ti­on: Fin­ding Solu­ti­ons

The last edi­ti­on of our web­i­nar series “Pla­ne­ta­ry Health Dia­lo­gues” on Tues­day, 19 March 2024, 4.00 — 5.00 pm CET focu­sed on che­mi­cal pol­lu­ti­on for the second time and dis­cus­sed recent and pro­s­pec­ti­ve legis­la­ti­ve efforts of the EU to tack­le the pol­lu­ti­on cri­sis. The recor­ding is available now (see below).

In addi­ti­on to cli­ma­te chan­ge and bio­di­ver­si­ty loss, envi­ron­men­tal pol­lu­ti­on is the third major anthro­po­ge­nic pla­ne­ta­ry cri­sis of our time. Tons of harmful and some­ti­mes per­sis­tent sub­s­tances are released into the soil, water and air, par­ti­cu­lar­ly along the che­mi­cal value chain. At the same time, the che­mi­cal indus­try con­tri­bu­tes signi­fi­cant­ly to exa­cer­ba­ting the other pla­ne­ta­ry cri­ses, accoun­ting for 6.3% of glo­bal green­house gas emis­si­ons.

The first Pla­ne­ta­ry Health Dia­lo­gue on the topic took place on 22 Febru­ary 2024 and pro­vi­ded an over­view of the ext­ent of the health and envi­ron­men­tal impacts of che­mi­cals at the natio­nal, Euro­pean and glo­bal level as well as inter­na­tio­nal frame­works to mana­ge che­mi­cal pol­lu­ti­on. The recor­ding can be found here.

Buil­ding on this over­view of the sta­tus quo, the second web­i­nar focu­sed on EU laws, regu­la­ti­ons and moni­to­ring to tack­le the pol­lu­ti­on cri­sis. As this legis­la­ti­ve term of the Euro­pean Par­lia­ment is coming to an end, we loo­ked at which spe­ci­fic legis­la­ti­ve pro­ce­du­res have been initia­ted and imple­men­ted in the last five years to sol­ve che­mi­cal pol­lu­ti­on. Addi­tio­nal­ly, the web­i­nar gave an out­look on out­stan­ding needs for fur­ther poli­ti­cal action and enforce­ment in the upco­ming legis­la­ti­ve term.

First­ly, Magnus Løf­stedt, expert on Che­mi­cals, Envi­ron­ment and Health at the Euro­pean Envi­ron­ment Agen­cy (EEA), pro­vi­ded an over­view of the com­plex and inter­ac­ting EU poli­cy land­scape tan­gent to regu­la­ting and moni­to­ring the health and envi­ron­men­tal hazards and expo­sure of che­mi­cal pol­lu­ti­on. In addi­ti­on to cur­rent acti­vi­ties, tar­gets and pro­po­sals under the Euro­pean Green Deal’s Che­mi­cals Stra­tegy for Sus­taina­bi­li­ty and the Zero Pol­lu­ti­on Action Plan, he also dis­cus­sed sci­ence to poli­cy trans­fer initia­ti­ves.

Second­ly, Alex­an­dra Cater­bow, Co-Foun­der and Co-Direc­tor of the NGO Health and Envi­ron­ment Jus­ti­ce Sup­port (HEJ Sup­port), out­lined key poli­cy are­as of EU che­mi­cal legis­la­ti­on that the Euro­pean Com­mis­si­on had plan­ned but not mana­ged to pro­gress in this man­da­te and that she saw as par­ti­cu­lar­ly important to bet­ter pro­tect human health and natu­re. She iden­ti­fied the revi­si­on of the REACH Regu­la­ti­on (Regis­tra­ti­on, Eva­lua­ti­on, Aut­ho­ri­sa­ti­on and Rest­ric­tion of Che­mi­cals), the ban of so-cal­led ‘fore­ver che­mi­cals’ (PFAS) and bis­phe­nol A (BPA) in con­su­mer pro­ducts, the pha­se-out of PFAS in all but essen­ti­al pro­ducts and the stop of exports of EU-ban­ned che­mi­cals to third count­ries as prio­ri­ties for the next Euro­pean Com­mis­si­on.

The con­tri­bu­ti­ons and dis­cus­sions cle­ar­ly show­ed that pro­gress has been made to bet­ter pro­tect EU citi­zens and envi­ron­ment from some of the hazards posed by che­mi­cals but that in this com­plex glo­bal mar­ket, fur­ther legis­la­ti­ve action by the next Euro­pean Com­mis­si­on and bet­ter moni­to­ring and assess­ment of the health impacts of che­mi­cals is nee­ded. 

The event took place via Zoom and was held in Eng­lish.

Missed the web­i­nar? Watch the recor­ding here

The Health Risks of Pol­lu­ti­on: Fin­ding Solu­ti­ons” is part of CPHP’s web­i­nar series „Pla­ne­ta­ry Health Dia­lo­gues“, a month­ly exch­an­ge bet­ween Ger­man and inter­na­tio­nal scho­lars, poli­cy­ma­kers, and civil socie­ty actors to reflect and to col­la­bo­ra­te on ide­as for a para­digm shift towards equi­ty, health and well-being within pla­ne­ta­ry boun­da­ries.