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CRIN - Child Rights Information Network

10/02/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/02/2024 04:10

CRIN has joined over 100 other NGOs calling on EU institutions to ban the export of toxic products to non-EU countries

CRIN has joined over 100 other NGOs calling on EU institutions to ban the export of toxic products to non-EU countries

Brussels, 26 September 2024 - Along with Greenpeace, Amnesty International and other initiators, Child Rights International Network is calling on the European Union to close "hypocritical, cruel, unfair and intolerable" loopholes which allow companies based in the EU to export banned toxic products to other parts of the world, including the sale of unsafe children's toys.

Laws governing the sale and use of pesticides, children's toys, toxic chemicals, single-use plastics and intrusive artificial intelligence systems are subject to a loophole that allows companies to export dangerous categories of goods from Europe to the rest of the world.

Greenpeace EU campaigner Lis Cunha said:

"It's scandalous that EU bans on dangerous products don't apply when the goods are destined for non-EU countries. From plastics to pesticides, Europe's politicians know that these products are harmful to the environment and people's health, but they've chosen to put private profit above the wellbeing of vulnerable communities in other parts of the world. It's indefensible, and the EU must now act quickly to close these loopholes with a single, cross-cutting law."

Veblen Institute advocacy officer for trade policy reform, Stephanie Kpenou, said:

"It is high time to end this double standard, which violates the EU's environmental and human rights commitments and discredits the ambitions of the Green Deal. This ethically unjustifiable situation is yet another illustration of how EU trade policy is often conceived and implemented without regard to its adverse impacts on climate, biodiversity and human rights."

This joint briefing documents how these hypocritical trade loopholes appear in current and proposed laws, including:

  • 2006 REACH Regulation (chemicals)

  • 2009 Pesticides Regulation

  • 2009 Children's Toys Directive

  • 2019 Single-use Plastics Directive

  • 2023 Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation

  • 2023 proposal for a Toy Safety Regulation

  • 2024 AI Act

According to an investigation by Public Eye, in 2018, over 80,000 tonnes of pesticides containing substances banned within the EU were exported, contributing to the estimated 385 million cases of acute pesticide poisonings which occur each year.

In 2023, a Greenpeace Germany investigation revealed that toxic pesticides exported from the EU to non-EU countries were also sneaking back into Europe on agricultural produce such as limes, as a cocktail of toxins that could be dangerous for the health of European consumers.

According to the European Chemicals Agency, in 2020, over 660,000 tonnes of hazardous chemicals banned or severely restricted in the EU were exported from the EU to other countries.

The briefing also illustrates examples of existing EU legislation where the loopholes do not appear, and which provide precedent for action to close them. The EU regulation prohibiting goods produced with forced labour and the EU regulation on mercury both cover exports from the EU to non-EU countries.

It's hypocritical to disregard the health of citizens and children outside the EU; tt's immoral to profit off their harm. Loopholes governing the EU production and sale of dangerous chemicals and unsafe products to non-EU countries need to be changed, as they impact children's rights and their health globally.

Contacts:

Suzanne Astic, CRIN Policy and Advocacy Adviser on children's rights and chemicals:
[email protected]

Lis Cunha, Greenpeace EU trade campaigner:
+49 (0) 1703832076
[email protected]

Stephanie Kpenou, Veblen Institute advocacy officer for trade policy reform:
+33786439299
[email protected]

Greenpeace EU press desk:
+32 (0)2 274 1911
[email protected]

A press comment is also available on:www.greenpeace.eu