The House of Lords EU Energy and Environment Sub-Committee has
written to Defra Minister Thérèse Coffey MP highlighting the
significant concerns that remain about the Government’s
preparedness to take on the regulation of chemicals and maintain
chemical trade after Brexit, only weeks before it may need to do
so.
The Committee has been corresponding with the
Minister to monitor progress in establishing a UK chemicals
database and whether the essential functions would be tested and
ready for use on Brexit day. Based on the Minister’s latest
letter, the publication of the legislation that would implement a
UK chemical regulation regime post-Brexit, and new guidance from
the European Chemicals Agency, it is the Committee’s view
that:
-
Some chemical safety tests may need to be re-done,
which would increase businesses’ costs, potentially reduce the
number of chemicals available in the UK, and increase the
amount of animal testing.
-
The Minister has not stated whether the UK’s
database of chemicals that are authorised for use in the UK
will be ready in time, or explained the Government’s
contingency plan for if the database is not ready on Brexit
day.
-
Some companies are not aware of the Government’s
plans for post-Brexit chemical regulation.
-
It is not clear whether the Health and Safety
Executive will have enough resources to perform its new tasks
as the UK’s chemicals regulator.
, Chair of the Sub-Committee,
said: “We are a mere three weeks away from potentially
having to regulate chemicals for ourselves, and as far as we can
tell from the Minister’s updates we find ourselves with neither a
functioning database nor a functioning regulator. The Government
is risking people’s safety, not to mention the viability of the
UK’s chemicals sector, by not being adequately
prepared.”
The Committee has written to the Minister seeking
reassurance on the outstanding issues. Read the full
letter here.
Notes to
Editors
-
In November 2018 the Committee published
its Brexit: chemical regulation report which
warned the Government's preparations for regulating chemicals
after Brexit are not progressing quickly enough, risking human
and environmental health and with potentially severe
consequences for the chemicals sector. Read the
report here.