28 August 2008
New standards on pesticides violate food safety
From 1 September 2008, the maximum legal limits on the level of pesticides
allowed in food items sold in the EU will dramatically increase. Dietary
exposure to pesticides is set to rise while many residue limits will become
unsafe for consumers. The development follows new legislation from the
European Commission intended to harmonise food standards across the EU.
Concerned at the growth in dietary exposure to pesticides, Natuur en Milieu,
and PAN Europe, an umbrella group of European health and environmental
organisations, have issued a legal challenge to the new legislation. '
The
Commission has failed to deliver on its obligation to set legal limits at the
lowest achievable level', said Hans Muilerman, spokesperson for Natuur en
Milieu. '
There is also no consideration of the cumulative effects that pesticides
have on human health. Legal action is now necessary to force the
Commission to think again.'
A joint analysis by Greenpeace/ Global 2000 published today, shows that
several hundred residue limits are unsafe under the new legislation -
according to the EU's own safety standards and methodologies. In particular
the consumption of apples, pears, grapes, tomatoes and peppers could now
pose health risks for children. '
By raising the legal limits the European
Commission expects us to put up with more and more pesticides in our food.
Children should be safe to eat as much fruit and vegetables as they like. The
EU must revise these unsafe residue limits immediately,' demanded
Greenpeace chemicals expert, Ulrike Kallee.
Others challenge the manner in which the new limits were established. '
For
each pesticide, the Commission identified the country with the worst safety
limit and then sought to adopt this level as the new EU-wide standard',
explained Elliott Cannell, Coordinator of PAN Europe. 'European consumers
will now receive a much lower level of protection from dietary exposure to
over 200 different pesticides.'
Food items sold in Europe contain 349 different pesticides. Approximately half
of all food items are contaminated, while over 5% of fruits, cereals and
vegetables contain 5 or more pesticides.~
Media Contacts
For further comments please contact:
Elliott Cannell, Coordinator, PAN Europe
Hans Muilerman,
Policy Coordinator, Stichting Natuur en Milieu
Uli Kallee,
Chemicals Expert, Greenpeace Germany
Press Pack: FRANCAIS
— ENDS —
Notes to editors:
Food safety violations
A joint analysis by Greenpeace/ Global 2000 published today shows that several hundred
residue limits are now unsafe for consumers - according to the EU's own safety standards
and methodologies. A full copy of the study can be downloaded from
www.greenpeace.de
Legal limits are escalating
On 29 May, Global 2000 published a study which compared existing Maximum Residue
Limits (MRLs) in Austria with the incoming EU MRLs. Whilst 4% of MRLs were shown to
decrease, 65% of MRLs will rise from between 1.65-fold to 1000-fold of the current legal
maximum.
www.global2000.at/download/file5013.pdf
PAN Europe's legal challenge
On 11 August, PAN Europe filed an appeal to the Court of First Instance in an attempt to
force the Commission to rethink Commission Regulation 149/2008 which establishes the new
MRLs. PAN Europe says the Regulation is fundamentally flawed and should be reviewed as a
matter of urgency. For more information see PAN Europe's
Background Paper and
Legal Summary
Pesticides in the EU food chain
In total 349 different pesticides are present in food products sold in the EU. Some
45.7% of food items tested contains pesticides. Over 25% of fruits, cereals and vegetables
contain two or more different pesticides, while over 5% of fruits, cereals and vegetables
contain 5 or more different pesticides.
No delivery on high standards
In 2005, the European Parliament and the Council agreed Regulation 396/2005 stating that
new MRLs 'should be set at the lowest achievable level consistent with good agricultural
practice'. Yet for each pesticide the Commission identified the country with the worst safety
limit and sought to adopt this level as the new EU-wide standard.
No cumulative assessment
Regulation 396/2005 also states that the new MRLs should take into account cumulative and
synergistic effects, when the methods to assess such effects are available. Numerous
methodologies do exist to enable cumulative and synergistic assessments. Yet these factors
have not been taken into account in formulating the new MRLs.
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