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The Precautionary Principle

The EEB (European Environmen-

tal Bureau 1999) defines the Pre-

cautionary Principle as follows:

2.1 The Precautionary Principle

justifies early action to pre-

vent harm and an unaccept-

able impact to the environ-

ment and human health in the

face of scientific uncertainty

2.2 Precaution places the burden

of proof on the proponents

of the activity.

2.3 Precaution applies the substi-

tution principle, seeking safer

alternatives to potentially

harmful activities, including

the assessment of needs.

2.4 Precaution requires public

participation in decision-

making.

REACH (See Montebello

Agreement)

Registration, Evaluation, Authori-

zation and Restriction of Chemicals

(REACH)

The European Union’s REACH EC

1907/2006 regulatio

n was

estab-

lished on December 18, 2006 and

became law on June 1, 2007. The

regulation’s intent “should ensure

a high level of protection of human

health and the environment as well

as the free movement of substances,

on their own, in preparations and in

articles, while enhancing competitive-

ness and innovatio

n. This Reg

ulation

should also promo

te the deve

lopment

of alternative methods for the assess-

ment of hazards of substances.”

This law is the most compre-

hensive legislation ever completed

regulating all chemical substances. A

full 401 pages of this 849 page docu-

ment are 10 appendices that mostly

call out carcinogens, mutagens and

substances toxic to reproduction. The

rest of the document outlines and de-

fines the requirements of compliance.

REACH will affect chemical indus-

tries worldwide by requiring testing

and registration with the European

Chemicals Agency on any imported

chemical substance over 1,000 kg in

weight. Chemical substances manu-

factured in the European Union are

subject to the same regulation.

Recycling

The U.S. Department of Energy

defines recycling as “the process of

converting materials that are no lon-

ger useful as designed or intended

into a new product.”

Renewable Energy

The U.S. Department of Energy

defines renewable energy as “energy

derived from resources that are

regenerative or for all practical pur-

poses cannot be depleted.

“Types of renewable energy

resources include moving water

(hydro, tidal and wave power),

thermal gradients in ocean water,

biomass, geothermal energy, solar

energy and wind energy.

“Municipal solid waste (MSW) is

also considered to be a renewable

energy resource.”

Reservoir

The Intergovernmental Panel on

Climate Change defines reservoir as:

“A component of the climate system,

other than the atmosphere, which has

the capacity to store, accumulate or

release a substance of concern, for

example, carbon, a greenhouse gas or

a precursor. Oceans, soils and forests

are examples of reservoirs of carbon.

Pool is an equivalent term (note that

the definition of pool often includes

the atmosphere). The absolute quan-

tity of the substance of concern held

within a reservoir at a specified time

is called stock.” For example, up-

take or (carbon) sequestration, adds

greenhouse gases to rainforests (res-

ervoir) and their soils (reservoir).

RoHS

An acronym for Restriction of

Hazardous Substances Directive (the

lead-free directive).

Although not a law, the European

Union passed this directive in 2006,

limiting the use of six materials in

any part of electronic and electrical

products. The six materials limited

by RoHS are: lead, mercury, cad-

mium, hexavalent chromium (chro-

mium VI or Cr6+), polybrominated

biphenyls (PBB) and polybrominat-

ed diphenyl ether (PBDE). PBB and

PBDE are flame retardants used in

some plastics.

Similar standards have been

adopted in China, Japan, Korea

and California. The U.S. federal gov-

ernment currently has no plans to

adopt a similar directive.

Sink

“Any process, activity or mecha-

nism that removes a greenhouse

gas, an aerosol or a precursor of a

greenhouse gas or aerosol from the

atmosphere” is considered a sink,

according to sources at the Intergov-

ernmental Panel on Climate Change.

A sink removes a greenhouse gas,

for example, from the atmosphere,

then by uptake or (carbon) seques-

tration, the green

house gas is add-

ed to a reservoir (see Reservoir and

Uptake/Sequestration).

Stakeholder(s)

The online Business Directory

describes this as, “Person, group or

organization that has direct or indi-

rect stake in an organization because

it can affect or be affected by the

organization’s actions, objectives and

policies. Key stakeholders in a busi-

ness organization include creditors,

customers, directors, employees, gov-

ernment (and its agencies), owners

(shareholders), suppliers, unions and

the community from which the busi-

ness draws its resources. Although

stake-holding is usually self-legitimiz-

ing (those who judge themselves to

be stakeholders are de facto so), all

stakeholders are not equal and dif-

ferent stakeholders are entitled to

different considerations. For example,

a firm’s customers are entitled to fair

trading practic

es but they are not

entitled to the

same consideration as

the firm’s employees.”

Sustainable development

Economic, social (political) and en-

vironmental development that is har-

monized for the good of all interests.

Many, including the United Na-

tions, use the definition from the

Data

Points

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