Title: Precautionary Principle
1Precautionary Principle
- Joe Hess Biogen Idec
- 760.231.2491
- Patti Krebs IEA
- 619.544.9684
2IEA Public Policy Role
- Air
- Water
- Hazardous Materials
- Solid Waste
- Energy
- Sustainability/ISO 14001/EMS
- Environmental Justice
3Agenda
- Definitions
- Use in Public Policy
- What it Means
- Alternatives
- Path Forward
4Precautionary Principle Examples
Tobacco Smoke Genetically Modified Foods Ban
of DDT Monarch Butterflies Potatoes Chlorine
disinfecting drinking water Medical Devices
5What is the Precautionary Principle?
- "An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure"
- "Better Safe than Sorry"
- "Do No Harm"
- "Look Before you Leap"
6Precautionary Principle General Definitions
- Society should guard against potentially harmful
activities even if some cause and effect
relationships have not been fully established. - Take action now as individuals and as a society
to prevent harm to human health and the
environment before it happens. - When the potentially adverse effects of a
proposed activity are not fully understood, the
action should not be allowed to proceed.
7Precautionary Principle 92 Rio Summit
1992 Rio Declaration "Where there are threats
of serious or irreversible damage, lack of
full scientific certainty shall not be used as a
reason for postponing cost-effective measures
to prevent environmental degradation."
8Precautionary Principle Wingspread
1998 Wingspread Statement "When an
activity raises threats of harm to human health
or the environment, precautionary measures
should be taken even if some cause and
effect relationships are not fully established
scientifically."
9Precautionary Principle and Government
RolePublic Trust Doctrine 1st Ever
"Where scientific evidence is preliminary and not
yet conclusive regarding resources which are part
of the public trust, it is prudent to
adopt precautionary principles in protecting the
resource. - Hawaii Supreme
Court, 2003
10San Francisco's Precautionary Principle 1st
City to Adopt Ordinance, 2003
- There is a duty to take anticipatory action to
prevent harm - The community has a right to know complete and
accurate information - Decisions must be transparent, participatory and
informed by the best available information - There is a duty to examine a full range of
alternatives, including the alternative of doing
nothing - Decisions makers must consider the full range of
cots, including costs outside the initial price
11Common Elements Precautionary Principle
- Plausible threats of harm -
Lack of scientific certainty -
Precautionary action to prevent harm
12Options for Use of the Precautionary Principle
- Ethical Directive, Belief or Philosophical
Guide Treaty Preambles
German word for precautionary principle means
"forecaring" Presidential
Commission on Sustainable Development -
Regulatory Tool Risk management
(rather than prevention)
Administrative agency activity - Overarching
principle guiding the research agenda,
legislative, regulatory and judicial actions
13Current vs Proposed Approaches
Current Framework Risk Assessment What is
acceptable level of harm(o.e., of cancers in
1000 people) Does this activity/product fall
within that level?
Precautionary Principle Alternatives Analysis Is
this potentially hazardous activity/product
necessary? What less hazardous options are
available? How little damage is possible?
14Definition Precautionary Approach
U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy To ensure the
sustainability of ecosystems for the benefit of
future as well as current generations,
decisionmakers should follow a balanced
precautionary approach, applying judicious and
responsible management practices based on the
best available science and on a proactive rather
than a reactive policy. Where threats of serious
or irreversible damage exist, lack of full
scientific certainty shall not be used as a
justification for postponing action to prevent
environmental degradation. Management plans and
actions based on this precautionary approach
should include scientific assessments, monitoring
mitigation measures to reduce environmental risk
where needed and periodic reviews of any
restrictions and their scientific uses.
15Industry Position
- Precautionary measures are wise and necessary
- Laws and regulatory programs already contain
precautionary measures - Concerned with extreme interpretation
- Want Science Based approach vs it Might Cause
Harm
16PP Examples of Industry Activities
-
- Strong commitment to pollution prevention,
continuous process improvement - Environmentally preferable purchasing policy
- Raw Material/Product/Chemical Substitution
(I.e., using less toxic formulations) - Green Chemistry
- Recycling/Take-back programs
17CalEPADefining Environmental Justice Industry
recommendation Protect public health and the
environment of a reasonable threat of serious and
irreversible harm, based on the best available
scientific evidence and considering the risk of
potential harm, societal benefit, the level of
scientific uncertainty and the consequences of
both action and inaction.
18Chemical Regulation -- Challenges
19Fear of Chemicals
- Fear of chemicals is increasing Chemo-phobia
- Fear of products, manufacturing processes
- Groups pushing Body Burden Chemical
Trespass campaigns - Detection of chemicals in biomonitoring data
perceived as equaling health impacts - Regardless of at what levels.
- Biomonitoring information is personal and
emotional.
20UC Berkeleys California Center for Policy
Research
- UC Berkeleys California Center for Policy
Research conducted a closed process study to
assess Californias capacity to monitor chemicals
in the environment and human health. - Report is expected to be released in early April.
21Berkeley Report Expected Recommendations
- New CA chemical agency.
- Remove from market synthetic chemicals that have
been identified in humans. - Assess new fees based on the volume of chemicals
in commerce. - Establish product substitution as the primary
means of control.
22Political Venue
- Abandoning federal venue
- Focusing instead on state and local levels
- Legislation based on the Precautionary
Principle - Using global regulation, particularly the
European Unions REACH and other policies as the
standard for environmental policies - CA represents a challenging political environment.
23Pending Legislation
- AB 319 (Chan)
- Bans the use of Bisphenol-A and phthalates in
toys and products intended for children under the
age of 3. - Completely ignores weight of the evidence in
favor of the precautionary principle. - Set for hearing in Assembly Health, 4/5/05
- SB 490 (Lowenthal)
- Requires CalEPA to contract with the Netherlands
to develop a list of substances that country has
deemed hazardous to human health and report back
to the legislature by 2006 the actions taken by
the Netherlands to protect their citizenry. - Outsourcing?
24Pending Legislation
- AB 289 (Chan)
- Requires chemical manufacturers to provide a
test method to the state for thousands of
chemicals imported or sold. - Ignores wealth of information already available
through ACCs High Production Volume Challenge
program. - Requests information on all chemicals, regardless
of whether they are likely to be released - Estimated costs to manufacturers 15 billion
- SB 600 (Ortiz)
- Healthy Californians Biomonitoring Program to
measure chemical exposures in people. - ACC supports science-based biomonitoring programs
CDC is a good example. - Biomonitoring data indicates an exposure has
occurred but not when, where, or for how long.