THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE
A new principle for guiding human activities, to prevent harm to
the environment and to human health, has been emerging during the
past 10 years. It is called the "principle of precautionary
action" or the "precautionary principle" for short. (See REHW
#257, #284, #319, #363, #378, #423, #539, #540.)
An international group of scientists, government officials,
lawyers, and labor and grass-roots environmental activists met
January 23-25 at Wingspread in Racine, Wisconsin to define and
discuss the precautionary principle.[1] After meeting for two
days, the group issued the following consensus statement:
Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary Principle
"The release and use of toxic substances, the exploitation of
resources, and physical alterations of the environment have had
substantial unintended consequences affecting human health and
the environment. Some of these concerns are high rates of
learning deficiencies, asthma, cancer, birth defects and species
extinctions, along with global climate change, stratospheric
ozone depletion and worldwide contamination with toxic substances
and nuclear materials.
"We believe existing environmental regulations and other
decisions, particularly those based on risk assessment, have
failed to protect adequately human health and the environment
--the larger system of which humans are but a part.
"We believe there is compelling evidence that damage to humans
and the worldwide environment is of such magnitude and
seriousness that new principles for conducting human activities
are necessary.
"While we realize that human activities may involve hazards,
people must proceed more carefully than has been the case in
recent history. Corporations, government entities, organizations,
communities, scientists and other individuals must adopt a
precautionary approach to all human endeavors.
"Therefore, it is necessary to implement the Precautionary
Principle: When an activity raises threats of harm to human
health or the environment, precautionary measures should be taken
even if some cause and effect relationships are not fully
established scientifically. In this context the proponent of an
activity, rather than the public, should bear the burden of proof.
"The process of applying the Precautionary Principle must be
open, informed and democratic and must include potentially
affected parties. It must also involve an examination of the full
range of alternatives, including no action." [End of statement.]
Thus, as formulated here, the principle of precautionary action
has 4 parts:
- People have a duty to take anticipatory action to prevent
harm. (As one participant at the Wingspread meeting summarized
the essence of the precautionary principle, "If you have a
reasonable suspicion that something bad might be going to happen,
you have an obligation to try to stop it.")
- The burden of proof of harmlessness of a new technology,
process, activity, or chemical lies with the proponents, not with
the general public.
- Before using a new technology, process, or chemical, or
starting a new activity, people have an obligation to examine "a
full range of alternatives" including the alternative of doing
nothing.
- Decisions applying the precautionary principle must be "open,
informed, and democratic" and "must include affected parties."
The precautionary principle is not really new. The essence of
the principle is captured in common-sense aphorisms such as "An
ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure," "Better safe than
sorry," and "Look before you leap." However, environmental
policy in the U.S. and Europe for the past 70 years has been
guided by entirely different principles perhaps best reflected in
the aphorisms, "Nothing ventured, nothing gained" and, "Let the
devil take the hindmost."
Participants at the Wingspread meeting came from the U.S.,
Canada, Germany, Britain, and Sweden.
"Precaution is natural in our lives," said Gordon Durnil, a
lawyer from Indianapolis, Indiana and author of THE MAKING OF A
CONSERVATIVE ENVIRONMENTALIST. (See REHW #453.) "From my
perspective as a conservative Republican, this is a conservative
principle." During the Bush administration, Durnil served as
chairperson of the International Joint Commission (IJC),
established by treaty to resolve Great Lakes problems between the
United States and Canada. (See REHW #284, #378, #505.)
Joel Tickner of the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, said
"Current decision-making approaches ask, 'How safe is safe? What
level of risk is acceptable? How much contamination can a human
or ecosystem assimilate without showing any obvious adverse
effects?' The approach stemming from the precautionary principle
asks a different set of questions: 'How much contamination can be
avoided while still maintaining necessary values? What are the
alternatives to this product or activity that achieve the desired
goal? Does society need this activity in the first place?'"[2]
Participants noted that current policies such as risk assessment
and cost-benefit analysis give the benefit of the doubt to new
products and technologies, which may later prove harmful. And
when damage occurs, victims and their advocates have the
nearly-impossible task of proving that a particular product or
activity was responsible.
Carolyn Raffensperger, coordinator of the Science and
Environmental Health Network (SEHN) says, "The role of science
[in decision-making] is essential. But the public must be fully
involved. Informed consent is just as essential."
Author Sandra Steingraber (see REHW #565) told the Wingspread
meeting that the precautionary principle suggests certain kinds
of arguments that grass-roots activists might use at the local
level:
- When toxic chemicals enter our bodies --or the bodies of our
children --without our informed consent, it is a toxic trespass.
Such a trespass is wrong and almost everyone recognizes that it
is wrong.
- A recent study by the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention
concluded that only 2% of cancer deaths are caused by industrial
toxins released into the environment. Steingraber points out
that, if we accept such an estimate at face value, this 2%
represents the painful deaths of nearly 11,000 individuals each
year in the U.S. alone --the annual equivalent of wiping out a
small city, thirty funerals every day. And these deaths
represent a form of homicide. Such homicides are wrong and
almost everyone recognizes that they are wrong.
- We all have a fundamental human right to enjoy our environment
free of fear. Those who put toxics chemicals into the
environment --whether as wastes or as products --deny us this
human right. Almost everyone recognizes that such a denial of
human rights is wrong.
At the policy level, Wingspread participant Robert Costanza of
the University of Maryland has suggested an "assurance bond"
--which he has dubbed the "4P approach to scientific
uncertainty." (See REHW #510.) The "4P" stands for "the
precautionary polluter pays principle." Using the "4P" approach,
before a new technology, process or chemical could be introduced,
the worst-case damage would be estimated in dollar terms. Then
the proponent of the new activity would be required to post a
bond for the full amount before startup.
Such "assurance bonds" are common in the construction industry
today, to assure that a job will be completed on schedule. A
"4P" bond would effectively shift the burden of proof onto the
proponent --if harmlessness could be shown as time passed, some
or all of the bond would be returned (with interest). A "4P" bond
would also give the proponent powerful financial incentives to
reduce the worst case damages by, for example, adopting
intrinsically less-damaging alternatives. The "4P" bond would
also give the proponent a financial incentive to continually
examine the effects of the new activity --if damages could be
shown to be less than the worst-case estimate, part of the bond
could be returned (with interest) but the burden of proof for
such a showing would remain with the proponent.
It seems unlikely that the precautionary principle will replace
the risk assessment approach to environmental protection in the
U.S. any time soon. Opposition from the chemical industry alone
would probably be sufficient to prevent that. A number of
advisors to the chemical industry have called the precautionary
principle unscientific and dangerous. For example, Jack Mongoven
of the public relations firm MBD (Mongoven, Biscoe and Duchin in
Washington, D.C.), has advised the chemical industry to "mobilize
science against the precautionary principle." (See REHW #496.)
Mr. Mongoven says the precautionary principle is antagonistic to
science, has its origins in instinct and feeling, and "threatens
the entire chemical industry."[2]
True, the precautionary principle does shift the burden of proof
for harmlessness onto the producers of toxic chemicals. Most
people readily accept such a shift in the case of the
pharmaceutical industry, which must show safety and efficacy
before marketing a new drug. The rationale for placing such
requirements on the drug corporations was that humans would be
directly exposed to drugs, so safety had to be shown and the need
for the new drug established. Today we know that all landfills
leak, incinerators don't fully destroy toxic chemicals, and
humans are therefore exposed to low levels of essentially every
industrial chemical released into commercial channels (whether as
waste or as product). Therefore, the rationale for U.S.
pharmaceuticals policy would logically lead to the conclusion
that all industrial chemicals should be treated the same as
drugs: the burden of proof of harmlessness (and proof of need)
should fall on the producer.
To assure that producers have confidence in their own estimates
of harmlessness, the worst-case "4P" bond would serve nicely.
(The 4P bond simply asks the chemical corporations claiming "no
problem" to put their money where their mouths are.) If the
producer's estimate of harmlessness turned out to be wrong, the
large bond would be forfeited to pay the incurred costs. Those
who say they favor market-based solutions to environmental
problems should warmly embrace such an efficient and
fiscally-responsible precautionary proposal.
--Peter Montague
(National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO) |
| [1] Wingspread participants (affiliations are noted for
identification purposes only): Nicholas Ashford, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; Katherine Barrett, University of British
Columbia; Anita Bernstein, Chicago-Kent College of Law; Robert
Costanza, University of Maryland; Pat Costner, Greenpeace; Carl
Cranor, University of California, Riverside; Peter deFur,
Virginia Commonwealth University; Gordon Durnil, attorney; Dr.
Kenneth Geiser, Toxics Use Reduction Institute, University of
Mass., Lowell; Dr. Andrew Jordan, Centre for Social and Economic
Research on the Global Environment, University Of East Anglia,
Britain; Andrew King, United Steelworkers of America, Canadian
Office, Toronto, Canada; Frederick Kirschenmann, farmer; Stephen
Lester, Center for Health, Environment and Justice; Sue Maret,
Union Institute; Dr. Michael M'Gonigle, University of Victoria,
British Columbia, Canada; Peter Montague, Environmental Research
Foundation; John Peterson Myers, W. Alton Jones Foundation; Mary
O'Brien, environmental consultant; David Ozonoff, Boston
University; Carolyn Raffensperger, Science and Environmental
Health Network; Pamela Resor, Massachusetts House of
Representatives; Florence Robinson, Louisiana Environmental
Network; Ted Schettler, Physicians for Social Responsibility; Ted
Smith, Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition; Klaus-Richard Sperling,
Alfred-Wegener Institut, Hamburg, Germany; Sandra Steingraber,
author; Diane Takvorian, Environmental Health Coalition; Joel
Tickner, University of Mass., Lowell; Konrad von Moltke,
Dartmouth College; Bo Wahlstrom, KEMI (National Chemical
Inspectorate), Sweden; Jackie Warledo, Indigenous Environmental
Network.
[2] Bette Hileman, "Precautionary Principle," CHEMICAL &
ENGINEERING NEWS [C&EN] February 9, 1998, pgs. 16-18.
[3] Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention, "Harvard Report on
Cancer Prevention," CANCER CAUSES AND CONTROL Vol. 7, Supplement
1 (1996), pgs. 3-59.
Descriptor terms: precautionary principle; wingspread;
regulation; meetings; wingspread statement on precaution; risk
assessment; jack mongoven; mbd; chemical industry; gordon durnil;
ken geiser; carolyn raffensperger; science and environmental
health network; sehn; ijc; joel tickner; sandra steingraber;
harvard center for cancer prevention; robert costanza; 4p
assurance bonding; assurance bonds; burden of proof; alternatives
assessment; pharmaceuticals policy; |