|
|
|
AIICA presents an alternative to NPE's sheepskin degreasing
Under the LIFE Programme,
AIICA has developed a leaflet and a DVD on an alternative to
NPE's sheepskin degreasing. For further information, please
visit AIICA's
web site under "projects - Eco-degreasing".
|
|
Rapex, safety alerts for non-food products
The EU Commission has just published a summary of the "safety
alerts" Member States of the EU are obliged to send it
about dangerous non-food products, under the Community early
warning system Rapex. This summary will be published every week
on the Commission's Internet
site which will also carry quarterly statistics on Rapex
notifications.
It is worth noting that Rapex was shored up by the new directive
on general product safety (directive 2001/95/EC modifying directive
92/5/EC), which entered into force last January. Safety alerts
for foodstuffs and animal feed are carried out via another early
warning system.
In a press release, David Byrne, Commission of health and Consumer
Protection, said:"one of the most important objectives
of consumer protection policy is to protect consumers of all
ages against shoddy, unsafe products. Providing information
to the public about product hazards is essential to achieve
this objective."
|
|
Environmental Communication from UNIC
In
December 2003, in the framework of the Italian Presidency of
the European Union, Milan hosted the 9th Conference of the Parties
on Climate Changes, the most important international summit
on environment after the one in Johannesburg in Autumn 2002.
The conference was organised by the UN and the Italian Ministry
of Environment.
On December 12th, 2003, closing date of the summit, the Italian
government presented the environmental policies of the Italian
tanning sector as an international example of excellence in
environmental management. Contents of the first Environmental
Report of the Italian tanning industry and results of efforts
and investments of the past years were presented, together with
possible future objectives.
The event represented a part of wider strategies of environmental
communication, which aim at the valorisation of the ethic and
environmental content of leather correctly produced and at the
comparison with international competitors.
|
|
ETAD Information note related to Azo-dyes:
In 2002 COTANCE reached an agreement with ETAD (Ecological and
Toxicological Association of Dyes and Organic Pigments Manufacturers)
on an information note regading azo-dyes and cooperation regarding
the compliance with the proposed 19th Amendment to Directive
76/769, which restricted the use of certain azo dyes, restrictions
that apply to textile and leather articles.
ETAD
and COTANCE signed an Information Note and the two Appendixes
that are annexed to it: one containing a diagram with a decision
tree regarding with the “Review by the dye manufacturer of product
range” and the other a “Model declaration of compliance with
the restriction of certain azo colorants under the 19th Amendment
to Directive 76/769/EEC”. Through this document, they promote
best practice and recommend a number of measures to minimise
the harmful effects of false positives. These measures are the
result of certain inefficiencies of the current analytical method,
which for instance doesn’t differentiate between a restricted
4AAB (4-aminoazobenzene) dye and an unrestricted dye.
As
a result of this cooperative effort throughout the leather value
chain, we pursue to inform dye suppliers, manufacturers, customers
and retailers of finished leather articles and regulatory control
authorities of this situation, so that tested articles are not
concluded to be non-compliant.
For
further information on this note: http://www.etad.com/news.html
|
|
IPPC
-
COTANCE Document on BAT’s
economic viability and their effect on competitiveness for SME’s
- the Leather sector
(
- Document on IPPC for tanneries:
download here .
- Report on the final draft dated March 2001 at the 9th IEF
meeting, by Ineke Jansen, European Commission:
download here .
|
|
COTANCE signs UNEP's declaration on cleaner production
On 29
April 2002, in Prague, Mr Gonzalez-Quijano, Secretary General
of COTANCE, signed the International Declaration on Cleaner
Production on behalf of his association.
The International
Declaration on Cleaner Production is a commitment to the
goal of sustainable development by the bodies who are signatories
to it. It was formulated by the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) in order to eliminate pollution before it is created,
rather than clean up the damage caused.
Following
a Council decision taken in 2000, COTANCE had decided to become
a signatory to the UNEP declaration. In signing up, the European
Tanning Industry makes public its commitment to favour pollution
prevention and cleaner production. Indeed this is already a
reality in most of the European Tanneries and should therefore
be communicated to the general public by all available means,
first by signing the UNEP declaration and then, by further implementing
and widely disseminating its principles (see also article on
COTANCE report on sustainability).
|
| COTANCE
submits a report on Sustainability to UNEP
The COTANCE
report for the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (Johannesburg) is an unprecedented
achievement of the leather industry. Europe's tanners participate
in the reporting exercise of UNEP with regard to the three pillars
of sustainability. This is a contribution to the global leather
industry because it sets a benchmark against which to measure
achievements in terms of sustainability and a yardstick in the
quest for sustainability of the tanning industry
You may download the COTANCE report directly on UNEP's
web site.
|
| |
|