Safety of Plastics: Let's talk about it
Alberto Alemanno |
The first entry of the blog was kindly provided by Alberto Alemanno, Jean Monnet Professor of EU Law and Risk Regulation, HEC Paris and Global Professor at New York University. He will speak on 5 November on the topic "The divergent approaches to risk regulation between EU and the US”.
Science, Politics and
Industry
1. What should be the role of science in policy making?
Science should be the privileged source of advice for policymaking. By providing risk managers with the ‘state of the art’ of regulatory science, scientific input should inform their decision and continuously enlighten their understanding of the phenomena that they aim at regulating.
Science should be the privileged source of advice for policymaking. By providing risk managers with the ‘state of the art’ of regulatory science, scientific input should inform their decision and continuously enlighten their understanding of the phenomena that they aim at regulating.
2. What do you expect from policy makers?
Policymakers are expected to identify all sources of
knowledge capable of informing their decisions. In so doing, they should listen
to the scientists, the relevant industries, NGOs and civil society. The more
they listen the better. The legitimacy of their decision depends on their
ability to have listened and blended the input received.
3. Can you define robust science vs. non-conclusive
science?
Not all science is the same. Only science that lies on
generally accepted principles and methodologies deserve to be considered in
policymaking. Yet given the inherent dynamic nature of the scientific process
policymakers should be capable to understand the need to also listen to
minority opinions and new emerging trends. It is only by doing justice to the
complexities of science that policymakers will serve society.
4. Is industry funded research to be trusted?
When opposed to ‘publicly funded science’, industry funded
research emerges today as the dominant source of advice for policymakers. The
ensuing dominance combined with a perception of pro-industry bias nurture in
the public a feeling of scepticism. While this is often justified, it would be
erroneous to rule out the whole industry funded research for the only fact of
being sponsored by those who have a stake in the outcome of that science.
However, the challenge to render industry funded research credible and
acceptable by society belongs to the industry itself. Here there are several
techniques available today. A transparent and inclusive design for the
different studies might be a good beginning together with a careful selection
of the scientists involved.
5. How to avoid conflicts of interests hampering
the credibility of independent agencies?
There is only one answer to this question:
more transparency and openness by all stakeholders involved: from the industry
to the agencies themselves.
The divergence approaches to risk regulation between the EU and US
6. Does culture affect how we approach legislation? Can you give examples?
The divergence approaches to risk regulation between the EU and US
6. Does culture affect how we approach legislation? Can you give examples?
As illustrated by many of the classic disputes of the past
(e.g. Hormone beef, Biotech, Chlorinated water), culture offers a powerful lens
to understand many of the regulatory divergences existing across the Atlantic.
Hence the current difficulties in conceiving within the TTIP negotiations a
possible mechanism capable of promoting regulatory convergence around risk
issues. However, culture should not be used as an excuse to postpone a
meaningful debate upon how to reconcile our visions upon the notion of risk,
safety, equivalence and mutual recognition. Rather, after decades of mutual
mistrust, time has come to also discuss about how culture may be internalised
in our respective regulatory systems. It is only by integrating, by rendering
it transparent, the cultural factors within the risk regulatory decision-making
that we will be able to overcome our historical differences. I have been
writing about how to do so over the last couple of years. My claim is that too
often policymakers prefer to hide non-scientific argument as scientific in
order to pass muster of the WTO scientific requirement. This is obviously a
pervert approach but which - unfortunately - was induced by a narrow reading of
the WTO Agreements.
How to deal with
unintended consequences of precautionism?
7. When should the precautionary principle be
applied?
The precautionary
principle is one of the dominant features of the EU risk regulatory system.
This is not to suggest that other legal orders such as the US do not rely on a
regulatory philosophy mimicking such a principle. Time has come to go beyond the
rhetoric of precaution as an abstract principle and test the reality of
precaution in practice. Challenging conventional wisdom about European and U.S.
approaches to risk regulation, the recent study by Jonathan Wiener et al. finds that since the 1970s there
has been little transatlantic difference in the overall level of precaution,
but that instead there have been variations in precaution across particular
individual risks. For example, while Europe has
been more precautionary regarding genetically modified foods, beef hormones,
toxic chemicals, and climate change, the U.S. has been more precautionary
regarding mad cow disease, air pollution, ozone depletion, and terrorism.
Moreover, both the U.S. and Europe have adopted systems of regulatory oversight
through impact assessment.
This illustrates that the precautionary
principle, like any other risk management principle, should be applied only
when its conditions of application are met. These were codified by the
Commission Communication in 2000 in the aftermath of the Hormones
dispute : this is unfortunately a policy – as opposed to legal – document
that has clearly not survived its time. I have been encouraging the EU
Commission to be brave enough to revise and revamp this document.
8. How can the precautionary principle enhance
innovation?
This has been and remains one of the central questions of my
risk regulation’s scholarship over the last 10 years. As I had the chance to
theorise and illustrate in several contexts (e.g. GMOs, nanotech, volcanic
ashes, neonicotionoids) the only chance for the precautionary principle to
remain a credible feature of EU risk regulation is to ensure that its
invocation remains within the limits established by the EU legislator. What is
more, there is a clear need for EU Courts to show less deference towards the
scrutiny of science-based measures inspired by the precautionary principle. Too
often the judges appear ready to give up their authority when called upon to
exercise judicial review of those measures and rather prefer to defer this
judgment to the policymakers. In so doing, they do not only loose authority over
the policing of this principle but also contribute to weaken (thus watering
down its normative content) the precautionary principle.
Is innovation
possible in risk averse society?
9. Is Europe risk averse?
Claiming that Europe is risk averse sounds an overstatement,
especially in the light of the empirical difficulties to substantiate it. As
mentioned above, studies focusing diachronically on the evolution of the use
and invocation of precaution demonstrate that this has not been (nor is) the
case. However, the very same studies suggest that, due a combination of
factors, the EU has embraced in recent years an approach to the regulation of
risk that appears particularly averse to both new technological developments and
old applications. While it remains to be discussed and studied why this is
occurring, it appears clear that several institutional features of the actual
EU decision-making system, such as the European Parliament, too often operate
as ‘social amplifiers of risk’. The abusive use of the precautionary principle
also plays a role in this dynamic together with a lack of rigorous approach to
its interpretation by several actors including NGOs.
10. Do
we need to take risk to be innovative? Historical record shows that this is the
way to go. There do not seem to exist many alternatives.
Health and Safety for
Competitiveness
11. What would be your message to policy makers when
it comes to the precautionary principle?
As discussed above,
the credibility of the precautionary principle is at stake today. This is
largely due an unpredictable invocation of it typically in highly salient risk
situations. Time has come to take the precautionary principle seriously. This
is true for all actors: NGOs, policymakers and Courts. The precautionary
principle – to quote former Commissioner David Byrne when presenting the 2000
European Commission Communication – cannot become a ‘jolly’ to be invoked every
single time there is some fear vis-à-vis a substance or an activity. In any
event, according to the same Communication, the invocation of the principle
should be “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) ”. Unfortunately very
few non-legislative acts today are subject to a formal impact assessment. Given the significant number of non-legislative acts adopted every
year (around 2000 as opposed to 50-70 legislative acts), there is clearly a
case for a more systematic performance of impact assessement on these items.
12. Can innovation (therefore, competitiveness) be
possible with the application of the precautionary principle?
The precautionary principle as such is not – despite its
current critics – inherently biased against innovation. It is only its current
interpretation and use by both policymakers and courts that has led to a
progressive denaturation of its normative content. Precaution and
competitiveness are not enemies but should – in any post-modern civilization –
be reconciled to the benefit of society.
13. In an ideal world, the scientific community,
policy makers and industry should work together in order to guarantee the
safety and health of all consumers, or should have be a healthy distrust
between them to secure the health and safety of consumers?
A healthy distrust among actors whose objectives are too
often divergent is – and should remain – one of the main features of any risk
regulatory regime. However, given the ‘healthy’ nature of such a relationship, the
ensuing tensions should not prevent some dialogue from occurring. Unfortunately the
current debate surrounding risk regulation is just too polarised to allow any
meaningful dialogue. This is regrettable to the extent each actor necessitates
the cooperation of the others to attain its own objectives: policymakers needs
to acquire information from the industry and the industry needs the
Commission’s ears to obtain its optimal level of regulation, policymakers need
NGOs’ involvement to legitimise its choices and the NGOs necessitate in turn the
Commission to obtain regulatory action, etc.
Dialogue however is not a ‘silver bullet’: it must be
construed through time by policymakers who carry the burden in creating the
conditions for having all actors buying into it.