Home Insurance – BioNord Chemicals https://bionordchemicals.com Global Leading Chemical Company Fri, 14 Apr 2023 14:25:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Danish Conservatives want national ban on ‘forever chemical’ PFAS https://bionordchemicals.com/2023/04/13/what-we-are-capable-to-beo-usually-discovered/ Thu, 13 Apr 2023 14:44:00 +0000 http://localhost/ctthemes/csuti/?p=164 The Danish Conservative party has changed stance and become the first right-wing party to support legislation against the use of PFAS chemicals in consumer products.

The party’s leader Søren Pape Poulsen has confirmed the Conservatives want a ban on the use of PFAS in all consumer products including toys, cosmetics, jewellery, furniture, cleaning products and hobby products.

No other parties on Denmark’s right have so far called for a total ban on the chemicals in products, while left wing parties generally agree on the measure.

“Sometimes you have to be first. Just like Denmark did when we forbade phthalates in toys a few years ago. We have now raised a case at the EU and that can take five to ten years, and until then I think we should do it unilaterally,” Poulsen said.

“Children should not be exposed to more chemicals than absolutely necessary and at the moment they are, if they bite their rain jacket or bite their gloves,” he said.

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a large group of synthetic chemicals used in various products since the early 1950s. Their past uses include foam in fire extinguishers, food packaging and in textiles, carpets and paints. Also known as ‘forever chemicals’, they persist in water and soil and can cause harm to human health.

The government has said it wants a ban on PFAS at EU level and also seeks to limit use of the chemical in Denmark.

Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke in January announced a ban on the substance in fire extinguishers, effective from 2024. It has been banned in paper and card food packaging since 2020.

A first reading was scheduled in parliament on Thursday of a proposal by the left-wing party Red Green Alliance to ban PFAS in consumer products.

The party’s lead political spokesperson, Mai Villadsen, welcome the Conservative stance in a Twitter post.

Why is PFAS pollution a problem?

Due to their chemical properties, PFAS chemicals take a long time to break down. They can be found in very low concentrations in blood samples from populations all over the world.

They are, however, unwanted in the environment because they have been found to have concerning links to health complications.

PFAS have been linked to a series of health complications and, if ingested in high enough amounts, are suspected of causing liver damage, kidney damage, elevated cholesterol levels, reduced fertility, hormonal disturbances, weaker immune systems, negatively affecting foetal development and being carcinogenic.

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Environment Ministry stalling on investigation into presence of dangerous chemicals in Danish rainfall https://bionordchemicals.com/2020/01/05/reasons-to-explan-fast-business-builder/ https://bionordchemicals.com/2020/01/05/reasons-to-explan-fast-business-builder/#respond Sun, 05 Jan 2020 02:30:46 +0000 http://localhost/ctthemes/csuti/?p=156 The discovery of PFAS in the groundwater was a common occurrence last year, but now there is growint concern that the dangerous chemical is also present in much of Denmark’s rainfall.

PFAS chemicals, which have been found in the groundwater of a fifth of the country’s municipalities, are highly detrimental to human health. They are carcinogenic, increasing the risk of both kidney and testicular cancer, and do not degrade naturally.

Pressure is accordingly growing on the environment minister, Magnus Heunicke, to initiate an investigation into the presence of PFAS in Denmark’s rainfall.

Passing the buck
However, the ministry, along with the Miljøstyrelsen environmental protection agency, seem content to pass the buck to one another, without anything being decided.

This is a source of frustration for Enhedslisten, SF, Danmarksdemokraterne and Konservative, along with government parties Venstre and Moderaterne, who all support an investigation.

“When there is such a serious suspicion of PFAS in the rain, it obliges the government to start an investigation immediately,” Mai Villadsen, the environment spokesperson for Enhedslisten, told TV2.

Conclusive evidence
Tests carried out by TV2 Vejr in collaboration with the Eurofins laboratory in the autumn found PFAS present in four out of five rainfall samples taken.

In one of them, taken in Lyngby just north of Copenhagen, there were 1.5 nanograms of PFAS per litre – just 0.5 shy of what is considered to be a dangerous amount if consumed.

And it has just been acknowledged that PFAS was found in tests in 2004, which revealed a presence of 2.4 nanograms per litre of PFOS and 23.2 nanograms per litre of PFDA.

Withheld for nearly two decades
Villadsen cannot believe that the 2004 results were withheld for so long.

“It surprises me enormously, and it is something we will have to get to the bottom of. Why hasn’t the Danish Parliament been informed about this, when there has been so much focus on PFAS in recent years?” she asked.

Venstre’s spokesperson Erling Bonnesen has also urged the ministry to take action: “It is important to look at the presence of PFAS in everything, including in rain, if it is relevant. I don’t think it’s satisfactory in any way.”

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