| EU Committee Votes to Further Assess Substances in RoHS Directive |
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| Written by Chelsey Drysdale | |||
| Wednesday, 02 June 2010 11:02 | |||
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BRUSSELS – Some substances, including halogenated flame retardants and PVC, should undergo further assessments for safe use in electrical and electronic equipment, said the European Parliament Environment Committee in a vote today. The list of banned substances in the RoHS Directive should apply to all such equipment, unless specifically excluded, the committee said, and one such exclusion could be for renewable energy generation. The committee approved its legislative report on the proposed recast of the Directive, and Members of European Parliament called for further evaluation of a number of substances not currently restricted. Assessment criteria should include the substance's potential health and environmental impact, they noted.
The European Parliament plenary vote is scheduled for July 5. MEPs voted in favor of an open scope, meaning all electrical and electronic material would be covered by the legislation, unless specifically excluded. They recommended certain areas be excluded from the Directive's scope, including inter alia, renewable energy generation, certain large-scale installations and industrial tools, and material for military purposes and vehicles. IPC expressed disappointment in the vote to include broad families of chemicals, such as organobromines, in Annex III for priority assessment. "While an outright ban of these chemicals has been averted, the committee’s decision falls far short of supporting a rigorous scientific assessment that would ensure protection of the environment and human health," the association said. But ChemSec, an NGO that supports banning all BFRs, claimed that scientific evidence supports the notion that BFRs and PVC are overwhelming harmful, and derided the committee's decision not decide to ban the chemicals.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 02 June 2010 14:01 |
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