IP/00/96
Brussels,
2 February 2000
Commission
adopts Communication on Precautionary
Principle
The
European Commission has today adopted a Communication on the use of
the precautionary principle. The objective of the Communication is
to inform all interested parties how the Commission intends to apply
the principle and to establish guidelines for its application. The
aim is also to provide input to the on-going debate on this issue
both at EU and international level. The Communication underlines
that the precautionary principle forms part of a structured approach
to the analysis of risk, as well as being relevant to risk
management. It covers cases where scientific evidence is
insufficient, inconclusive or uncertain and preliminary scientific
evaluation indicates that that there are reasonable grounds for
concern that the potentially dangerous effects on the environment,
human, animal or plant health may be inconsistent with the high
level of protection chosen by the EU. Today’s Communication
complements the recently adopted White Paper on Food Safety and the
agreement reached in Montreal this week-end on the Cartagena
Protocol on Bio-safety.
The
Communication also qualifies the measures that may be taken under
the precautionary principle. Where action is deemed necessary,
measures should be proportionate to the chosen level of protection,
non-discriminatory in their application and consistent with similar
measures already taken. They should also be based on an examination
of the potential benefits and costs of action or lack of action and
subject to review in the light of new scientific data and should
thus be maintained as long as the scientific data remain incomplete,
imprecise or inconclusive and as long as the risk is considered too
high to be imposed on society. Finally, they may assign
responsibility - or the burden of proof - for producing the
scientific evidence necessary for a comprehensive risk assessment.
These guidelines guard against unwarranted recourse to the
precautionary principle as a disguised form of
protectionism.
Today’s
Communication was presented to the Commission by Mr Erkki Liikanen,
Enterprise and the Information Society Commissioner, Mr David Byrne,
Health and Consumer Protection Commissioner, and Ms Margot
Wallström, Environment Commissioner. It is a follow-up to President
Romano Prodi’s speech to the European Parliament on 5 October
1999.
The
Communication recalls that a number of recent events have undermined
the confidence of public opinion and consumers because decisions or
absence of decisions were not supported by full scientific evidence
and the legitimacy of such decisions was
questionable.
The
Commission has consistently striven to achieve a high level of
protection, inter alia in the environmental and human, animal and
plant health fields. It is the Commission’s policy to take decisions
aimed to achieve this high level of protection on a sound and
sufficient scientific basis. However, where there are reasonable
grounds for concern that potential hazards may affect the
environment or human, animal or plant health, and when at the same
time the lack of scientific information precludes a detailed
scientific evaluation, the precautionary principle has been the
politically accepted risk management strategy in several fields.
Although the precautionary principle is not explicitly mentioned in
the EC Treaty except in the environment field, the Commission
considers that this principle has a scope far wider than the
environment field and that it also covers the protection of human,
animal and plant health.
The
Communication makes it clear that the precautionary principle is
neither a politicisation of science or the acceptance of zero-risk
but that it provides a basis for action when science is unable to
give a clear answer. The Communication also makes it clear that
determining what is an acceptable level of risk for the EU is a
political responsibility. It provides a reasoned and structured
framework for action in the face of scientific uncertainty and shows
that the precautionary principle is not a justification for ignoring
scientific evidence and taking protectionist
decisions.
The
horizontal guidelines established in this Communication will provide
a useful tool in the future for taking political decisions in this
regard and will contribute to legitimate decisions taken when
science is unable to assess completely the risk rather than
decisions based on irrational fears or perceptions. Thus, one of the
objectives of the Communication is to clearly describe the
situations in which the precautionary principle could be applied and
determining the scope of measures taken in this respect. It will
therefore help ensuring the proper functioning of the Internal
Market as well as a high level of protection and predictability for
consumers and economic operators located in the EU and
elsewhere.
Annex
COMMUNICATION FROM THE
COMMISSION
on
the precautionary principle
SUMMARY
1.
The
issue of when and how to use the precautionary principle, both
within the European Union and internationally, is giving rise to
much debate, and to mixed, and sometimes contradictory views. Thus,
decision-makers are constantly faced with the dilemma of balancing
the freedom and rights of individuals, industry and organisations
with the need to reduce the risk of adverse effects to the
environment, human, animal or plant health. Therefore, finding the
correct balance so that the proportionate, non-discriminatory,
transparent and coherent actions can be taken, requires a structured
decision-making process with detailed scientific and other objective
information.
2.
The
Communication's fourfold aim is to:
·
outline
the Commission's approach to using the precautionary
principle,
·
establish
Commission guidelines for applying it,
·
build
a common understanding of how to assess, appraise, manage and
communicate risks that science is not yet able to evaluate fully,
and
·
avoid
unwarranted recourse to the precautionary principle, as a disguised
form of protectionism.
·
It
also seeks to provide an input to the ongoing debate on this issue,
both within the Community and internationally.
3. The precautionary
principle is not defined in the Treaty, which prescribes it only
once - to protect the environment. But in practice, its scope is
much wider, and specifically where preliminary objective scientific
evaluation, indicates that there are reasonable grounds for concern
that the potentially dangerous effects on the environment, human, animal or plant health
may be inconsistent with the high level of protection chosen for
the Community.
The
Commission considers that the Community, like other WTO members, has
the right to establish the level of protection - particularly of the
environment, human, animal and plant health, - that it deems
appropriate. Applying the precautionary principle is a key tenet of
its policy, and the choices it makes to this end will continue to
affect the views it defends internationally, on how this principle
should be applied.
4. The precautionary
principle should be considered within a structured approach to the
analysis of risk which comprises three elements: risk assessment,
risk management, risk communication. The precautionary principle is
particularly relevant to the management of
risk.
The
precautionary principle, which is essentially used by
decision-makers in the management of risk, should not be confused
with the element of caution that scientists apply in their
assessment of scientific data.
Recourse
to the precautionary principle presupposes that potentially
dangerous effects deriving from a phenomenon, product or process
have been identified, and that scientific evaluation does not allow
the risk to be determined with sufficient
certainty.
The
implementation of an approach based on the precautionary principle
should start with a scientific evaluation, as complete as possible,
and where possible, identifying at each stage the degree of
scientific uncertainty.
5. Decision-makers
need to be aware of the degree of uncertainty attached to the
results of the evaluation of the available scientific information.
Judging what is an "acceptable" level of risk for society is an
eminently political
responsibility. Decision-makers faced with an unacceptable risk,
scientific uncertainty and public concerns have a duty to find
answers. Therefore, all these factors have to be taken into
consideration.
In
some cases, the right answer may be not to act or at least not to
introduce a binding legal measure. A wide range of initiatives is
available in the case of action, going from a legally binding
measure to a research project or a recommendation.
The
decision-making procedure should be transparent and should involve
as early as possible and to the extent reasonably possible all
interested parties.
6. Where action is
deemed necessary, measures based on the precautionary principle
should be, inter
alia:
·
proportional
to the chosen level of protection,
·
non-discriminatory
in their application,
·
consistent
with similar measures already taken,
·
based
on an examination of the potential benefits and
costs
of action or lack of action (including, where appropriate and
feasible, an economic cost/benefit analysis),
·
subject
to review, in
the light of new scientific data, and
·
capable
of assigning responsibility for producing the scientific evidence
necessary
for a more comprehensive risk assessment.
Proportionality
means tailoring measures to the chosen level of protection. Risk can
rarely be reduced to zero, but incomplete risk assessments may
greatly reduce the range of options open to risk managers. A total
ban may not be a proportional response to a potential risk in all
cases. However, in certain cases, it is the sole possible response
to a given risk.
Non-discrimination
means
that comparable situations should not be treated differently, and
that different situations should not be treated in the same way,
unless there are objective grounds for doing
so.
Consistency
means that measures should be of comparable scope and nature to
those already taken in equivalent areas in which all scientific data
are available.
Examining
costs and benefits
entails comparing the overall cost to the Community of action and
lack of action, in both the short and long term. This is not simply
an economic cost-benefit analysis:
its
scope is much broader, and includes non-economic considerations,
such as the efficacy of possible options and their acceptability to
the public. In the conduct of such an examination, account should be
taken of the general principle and the case law of the Court that
the protection of health takes precedence over economic
considerations.
Subject
to review in
the light of new scientific data, means measures based on the
precautionary principle should be maintained so long as scientific
information is incomplete or inconclusive, and the risk is still
considered too high to be imposed on society, in view of chosen
level of protection. Measures should be periodically reviewed in the
light of scientific progress, and amended as
necessary.
Assigning
responsibility for producing scientific evidence
is already a common consequence of these measures. Countries that
impose a prior approval (marketing authorisation) requirement on
products that they deem dangerous a priori reverse the burden
of proving injury, by treating them as dangerous unless and until
businesses do the scientific work necessary to demonstrate that they
are safe.
Where
there is no prior authorisation procedure, it may be up to the user
or to public authorities to demonstrate the nature of a danger and
the level of risk of a product or process. In such cases, a specific
precautionary measure might be taken to place the burden of proof
upon the producer, manufacturer or importer, but this cannot be made
a general rule.