BETA

8 Amendments of Massimo PAOLUCCI related to 2018/2589(RSP)

Amendment 6 #

Paragraph 2
2. Considers that the primary aim of the Commission should be to avoid that hazardous chemicals enter the material cycle, and to ensure better implementation of current legislation, while addressing those regulatory gaps, including in particular with respect to imported articles, that could act as barriers to a sustainable EU circular economy;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 21 #

Paragraph 5
5. Calls on the Commission and the Member States, in close conjunction with ECHA, to step up their regulatory activities to promote substitution of substances of very high concern and to restrict substances that pose unacceptable risks to human health or the environment in the context of REACH and specific sectorial or product legislation, so that recycled waste can be used as a major, reliable source of raw material within the Union;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 31 #

Paragraph 8 a (new)
8a. Underlines that it is of utmost importance that transparency on the presence of substances of concern in consumer products is improved in order to establish public trust in the safety of secondary raw materials; points out that improved transparency would further reinforce incentives to phase-out the use of substances of concern;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 41 #

Paragraph 10 a (new)
10a. Calls on the Member States and the Commission in this context, in conjunction with ECHA, to increase their efforts to ensure that, by 2020, all relevant substances of very high concern, including substances that meet the equivalent level of concern criterion, such as endocrine disruptors and sensitizers, are placed on the REACH candidate list, as laid down in the 7th Environmental Action Programme;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 56 #

Paragraph 17
17. Points out that Union rules should ensure that materials recycling does not perpetuate use of hazardous substances; notes with concern that legislation preventing the presence of chemicals in products, including imports, is scattered, neither systematic nor consistent and applies only to very few substances, products and uses, often with many exemptions; regrets the lack of progress on developing a Union strategy for a non- toxic environment with the aim to, among others, reduce exposure to substances of concern in products;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 64 #

Paragraph 21
21. BAs more than 80% of the environmental impact of a product is determined at the design stage, believes that the Ecodesign Directive, and other product specific legislation, should be used to introduce requirements to substitute for substances of concern; stresses that the use of substances of toxic nature or substances of concern, such as Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) and endocrine disrupters, should be specifically considered under the broadened ecodesign criteria without prejudice to other harmonised legal requirements concerning those substances laid down at Union level;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 71 #

Paragraph 23 a (new)
23a. Takes the view that in order to address the issue of the presence of substances of concern in recycled materials, it would be advisable to introduce a product passport as a tool to disclose materials and substances used in products;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 77 #

Paragraph 27
27. Believes that the rules for classifying waste as hazardous or non- hazardous should be fully aligned with those for the classification of substances and mixtures under CLP; emphasises the need to further develop the classification framework for waste and chemicals to include hazard endpoints of high concern, such as high persistence, endocrine disruption, bioaccumulation, or neurotoxicity;
2018/05/02
Committee: ENVI