alternatives
Roadmap for Comprehensive Chemicals Policy
HealthyToys.org urges manufacturers to adopt a comprehensive
chemicals policy for their company. The elements of that policy
should include:
- Know what is contained in your
products
- Know the chemical components of your
products.
- Know the process chemicals required to make your
products.
- Know the life-cycle impacts of your products
including the chemicals released during product use, and their
degradation and combustion byproducts.
- Signal vendors that
complete chemical ingredient information will be required over
time.
- Prescreen all chemicals before use for safety
-
Establish a baseline set of criteria that any chemical must meet in
order to be used in company products. The criteria must be
protective of children's health.
- All new chemicals the company
contemplates using should receive the highest level screening, to
prevent the integration of a new problem chemical into the company's
manufacturing system.
- Insure that all chemical components in existing products are
tested to assess hazards
- Comprehensively assess all
chemicals/materials in products for health/safety and environmental
concerns throughout the life cycle of that chemical/material. Use
screening tools where direct testing data is not available (the EPA
has a series of on-line tools) to determine the hazard profile of
all chemical components
- Initially screen all chemical
components and process chemicals against existing lists of chemicals
of concern
- Work toward comprehensive testing (or urge upstream
suppliers to provide comprehensive testing data) for key health and
environmental endpoints of concern for children's health
-
Evaluate all chemicals based on their inherent hazards, not on a
risk characterization. Prioritization may incorporate risk
characterization.
- Over time, only use chemicals that have been
fully tested for their ability to harm health or the environment,
and found to be less hazardous. Phase out chemicals that have not
been tested.
- Signal vendors that complete chemical testing will
be required for chemical components of products over time.
- Eliminate the worst chemicals and commit to continuous
improvement:
- Commit to use only inherently low hazard
chemicals.
- Set goals for benchmarking progress to safer
chemicals and prioritize high hazard chemicals for substitution with
safer alternatives.
- Commit to eliminating lead, mercury, and
cadmium and other persistent, bioaccumulative toxic chemicals
immediately as a first step, and phase out the use of PVC with
dangerous additives.
- Prohibit chemicals with a high hazard profile. These may
be chemicals that persist and bioaccumulate, chemicals that are
known carcinogens, mutagens and reproductive toxicants, known
neurotoxicants, ecologically harmful, etc. This list should go
beyond regulatory requirements. The list should be developed by
evaluating the inherent hazards of a chemical first, and then
prioritizing based on a life cycle assessment of the threats posed
by the chemical/material The list of attributes that are prohibited
should grow over time, in order to achieve a chemical profile for
the company that includes primarily low hazard chemicals.
- Commit to continuous improvement in the toxicity profile of
all chemicals used. Establish goals to reduce the overall
toxicity profile for the company. Those goals should be reviewed
regularly and should continually improve the chemical profile of the
company. Develop metrics to capture cost savings and other benefits
of the program. Align employee incentives with this goal.
- Disclose ingredients: Label and bar code or
otherwise provide health/safety/environmental attributes of products
for consumers/user in a way that is easy for the consumer to access.
- Publicly support government chemical reform measures:
Companies can provide a powerful voice for change at the state and
federal level. Individual chemicals policies by companies are an
inefficient way to provide comprehensive testing information to all
downstream users. Companies should support the reform of chemicals
management laws so that adequate information on chemical impacts are
provided to downstream users to choose the safest and most effective
chemicals. Companies should also support the development of safer
alternatives, and the creation of incentives to accelerate the
development of safer materials
- Be socially
responsible: Contract from and operate facilities that meet
basic human rights for workers and provide safe and healthy
workplaces.
- Publicly disclose progress: Disclose the policy and progress towards achieving it on your company's website, in your annual CSR/sustainability reporting, and in the media.
For information on how companies are leading in
adopting chemicals policies, see a review of case studies of healthy
business strategies http://www
.cleanproduction.org/HealthyBusiness.php
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