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EU moves against flame retardants.


On Sept. 6, the European Union's parliament provisionally voted to ban the use and importation of nearly all members of a family of flame retardants known as polybrominated diphenyl diphenyl /di·phen·yl/ (di-fen´il) a toxic compound comprising two linked benzene rings, used as a fungistat in containers for shipping citrus fruits.

di·phen·yl (d-f
 ethers (PBDEs PBDE - Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether
PBDE - Parallel Block-Decodable Encoder
PBDE - Pentabromodiphenyl Ether (flame retardant additive in plastics)
). Manufacturers use these compounds to protect products ranging from computer housings to upholstery fabric. So widely used are PBDEs that traces of the substances show up throughout the environment--even in human breast milk.

Because European Union (EU) parliamentary votes don't carry the weight of law, the ban won't go into effect unless a Council of Ministers representing the EU member states also agrees to it. Alternatively, those ministers could convince the parliament to scale back on the number of PBDEs earmarked for a phaseout.

To date, the EU's Council of Ministers has endorsed a ban on only one class of PBDEs--so-called penta forms, which contain rive bromine
Br
A volatile nonmetallic liquid element having a highly irritating vapor and used in disinfecting water and in various pharmaceuticals. Atomic number 35.
 atoms--notes Bert-Ove Lund of the Swedish National Chemicals Inspectorate in Solna Solna (sōl`nä), city (1995 pop. 54,160), Stockholm co., E Sweden, an industrial suburb of Stockholm. Manufactures include machinery, electrical goods, paper, and chocolate. It is the seat of the Swedish motion-picture industry and has numerous scientific institutes, including the Nobel Institute.. An earlier toxicity
O2 toxicity , oxygen toxicity serious, sometimes irreversible, damage to the pulmonary capillary endothelium associated with breathing high partial pressures of oxygen for prolonged periods.


tox·ic·i·ty (tk-s
 review performed for the EU identified these as apparent environmental hormones. Like polychlorinated biphenyls (SN: 6/16/01, p. 374), PBDEs appear to trigger neurological impairments in animal tests by mechanisms that may center on the disruption of the thyroid hormone thyroid hormone
n.
A hormone, especially thyroxine or triiodothyronine, produced by the thyroid gland.
 system.

Because an EU toxicity review of octa- and deca-PBDEs--forms containing eight or 10 bromine atoms--hasn't been completed, at least some EU members may resist extending a ban to those compounds. Gwynne Lyons, a Norwich, England-based advisor to the World Wildlife Fund-Europe, says that the recent vote "should only be seen as the first skirmish in what will be a long battle on deca- and octa- [forms of PBDEs]." These account for some 80 percent of European PBDE use.

A federal review of PBDE toxicity is also underway in the United States as part of a program that is evaluating potential chemical threats to children, notes Charles Auer, who directs the Environmental Protection Agency division charged with managing that program. Under it, industry groups submit their toxicity assessments to EPA, which the agency then sends out to other scientists for an independent review. Any U.S. regulatory action against PBDEs would come only if those assessments turn up signs of a likely hazard.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:polybrominated diphenyl ethers
Author:J.R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EU
Date:Sep 29, 2001
Words:356
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