By requiring industry to go green, the European Union is challenging the way America does business.
It was early in 2001 when
the American chemical
executives first heard the
news from Brussels: The
European Union was going
to require manufacturers
on both sides of the Atlantic
to conduct extensive safety and environmental tests on 30,000 common
chemicals. Of these, an estimated 1,500 deemed the most hazardous would be
severely restricted or banned.
The executives were taken aback. Thanks to their lobbying muscle, a plan like
this would never have gotten off the ground in Washington, D.C. Most of the
affected chemicals had been around for decades in everything from computers
to cosmetics, bathroom cleaners to baby toys. Testing them all, industry
estimated, would cost companies more than $8 billion. But losing access to the
EU's 370-million-person market was simply not an option.
A delegation of senior chemical-industry executives prepared to meet with
European regulators. The Americans were poised to argue that the legislation
was unnecessary and unworkable, that it would choke off trade and ruin the
European chemical market. With revenues of $460 billion a year, the chemical
industry is America's largest exporter and is used to getting what it wants.
"Some of them felt if they could just tell the Europeans what a bad idea the
new policy was, it would be dropped," says Fred McEldowney, senior director for
international affairs at the American Chemistry Council, the Washington
lobbying group that represents corporations like Dow, DuPont, and ExxonMobil.
But the American executives were in for
another surprise when their counterparts at
European companies told them to call off the
trip. The Europeans were afraid that such
"cowboy" tactics would upset their
negotiations with EU regulators, which were
already difficult, given the industry's poor
environmental reputation. Rather than
attempt to kill the proposal, the European
companies thought that the best they could
do was limit its scope, says Alain Perroy,
director general of the European Chemical
Industry Council. "There was no way to get
that legislation to disappear."
This was more than a tactical dispute. It
represents a fundamental difference in the way Europeans and Americans view
capitalism and the role of the state. While the EU had challenged U.S.
corporations before, quashing the proposed mergers of Sprint and WorldCom in
2000 and General Electric and Honeywell in 2001, those actions were
dismissed by American business leaders as overzealous protectionism. With
new environmental regulations like REACH (Registration, Evaluation, and
Authorization of Chemicals), it is becoming clear that Europeans are not
merely picking on a few companies to favor their own industry. They are
challenging the way America does business.
Until now, multinationals have mostly used their power and mobility to strongarm
governments into weakening environmental and labor regulations. This
kind of globalization has proceeded more or less unchecked for decades. But as
the chemical industry found out, the process doesn't have to lead downhill.
The REACH proposal has sparked a bitter battle, one that could decide whether
global trade can also raise standards. Heavy pressure from both European and
U.S. industry-as well as an all-out lobbying effort by the Bush
administration-finally took its toll in October, when the European Commission
released a scaled-back draft of the legislation. But even under the current
version, U.S. companies would have to dramatically alter their practices.
The influence of Brussels will be even stronger with the admission of 12 new
countries by 2007, expanding the European market to almost half a billion
consumers. Since making products differently for Europe wouldn't be costeffective,
the new green initiatives coming out of these once-sleepy halls of
power have the potential to reduce industry's impact on the environment all
around the world. Just as California's caps on greenhouse-gas emissions could
force automakers to build cleaner cars, U.S. companies will have to make
greener products if they want to sell to Europe.
While the chemicals-testing legislation is the most ambitious European
environmental action yet, it's by no means the first. Early last year, the EU
passed rules that will require foreign and domestic electronics makers who sell
products in its member states to stop using lead, cadmium, mercury, and
various flame retardants; domestic manufacturers will also have to pick up the
tab for recycling their products. Similar legislation was adopted in 2000 for the
auto industry, after lobbying pressure from U.S. carmakers backfired. "They
tried to scare us," says Karl-Heinz Florenz, a conservative German member of
the European Parliament. "The effect was that they didn't have any chance to
influence the [debate]. We didn't have any interest in meeting with them after
that."
Because the new electronics laws will affect not only EU manufacturers, but
their global supply chain, the American Electronics Association has informed its
members that they have less than two years to comply. Companies that fail to
do so risk heavy fines or may even be banned from Europe's markets. In an
association press release, senior vice president Tim Bennett says the legislation
has the "most far-reaching environmental policy requirements for electrical
and electronic equipment established by any polity in the world."
Europe did not always wield such influence. In the era following Rachel
Carson's revelations about the hazards of chemicals in Silent Spring, the
United States was the world's environmental leader. Between 1969 and 1977,
the United States set up the EPA and passed the National Environmental Policy
Act, the Clean Air Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the Clean Water Act. It
was also a model for its democratic institutions; its booming, innovative
economy; and its stringent financial regulations.
But behind the scenes, corporate America quickly began working to turn back
these gains. And over the years, the United States developed what journalist
Bill Moyers has called Washington's "mercenary culture," where government
officials are drawn from industry, while regulators-including top
environmental watchdogs-leave office to sell their services to the very
companies they used to police.
Ironically, these changes occurred just as Europe started going green. With its
roots in the antinuclear movement, European environmentalism cuts across
party and class lines. Since many Europeans live in crowded cities, problems
like air and water pollution hit home. The EU also lacks the unified rural and
suburban base that sustains the U.S. Republican Party, whose current leaders
are largely anti-environmental. Europeans' daily lives are not so dominated by
corporate interests. Many people still buy their food from neighborhood
markets, and take pride in locally produced goods. Intrusive advertising is not
as accepted, with serious efforts being made to ban ads for tobacco,
pharmaceuticals, and products directed at children. The Bush administration's
fight with EU regulators over their controls on genetically modified crops and
its abandonment of the Kyoto global-warming protocol solidified the United
States' declining reputation. Now "Old Europe" is leading the way.
"The EU is moving aggressively, while U.S. policy is stalemated," says David
Vogel, a professor of business and public policy at the University of California at
Berkeley. "Our public is much less outraged than the European public. The
median voter in America wants the status quo. The median voter in Europe
wants more regulation."
With its laissez-faire roots, the United States has historically been loath to pass
preemptive regulation. "There has to be a crisis, like Love Canal, where the
environment is being totally trashed," explains Professor Richard Stewart,
director of the environmental law center at New York University. "You have to
have something dramatic."
While U.S. corporate lobbyists commonly delay regulations by demanding that
government conduct more studies, the European Union embraces an approach
known as the precautionary principle. Simply put, this means "better safe than
sorry." In practice, the principle requires that when there seems to be a
significant risk, governments should act to protect the public regardless of
whether research is complete. The precautionary principle is still a long way
from being accepted in the United States. John D. Graham, a Bush
administration gatekeeper for new regulations, dismisses it as "a mythical
concept, perhaps like a unicorn." But the EU has enshrined the principle in one
of its core treaties. "Those in public office have a duty not to wait until their
worst fears are realized," the European Commission's director general for
health and consumer protection, Robert J. Coleman, declared in 2002.
The debate is epitomized by the controversial REACH legislation, which could be
enacted by late 2005. Instead of asking regulators to demonstrate that
chemicals are harmful, the new system would not allow chemicals on the
market until industry can establish that they are safe. Manufacturers will have
to do (and pay for) the work, which will include providing data on the toxicity of
their products and an assessment of their environmental risks. Currently such
testing is only done for new chemicals-a mere 3 percent of the 100,000
substances in use in Europe.
Originally, REACH required companies to test all chemicals they produced or
imported in amounts over one ton. But the ground shifted last October, when
the European Commission handed over the draft legislation to its parliament
and the Council of the European Union. The implementation costs-once
estimated at $14 billion-had been reduced by around 80 percent. And the
most rigorous testing would now be required only of the 10,000 chemicals
produced in quantities over ten tons. (By volume, those substances still
amount to more than 95 percent of all chemicals on the market.) The
remaining 20,000 chemicals would be subject to basic toxicity tests, but they
would be exempt from important analyses for effects on reproduction and
biodegradability.
"The U.S. push increased exponentially in the time leading up to the changes,"
says Veronique Scailteur, a lobbyist for Procter & Gamble. Secretary of State
Colin Powell asked American ambassadors in the various EU member nations
to lobby against the "burdensome" and "complex" testing requirements.
Senior EPA officials pushed for voluntary regulation, like the version used in
the United States that covers only 2,200 chemicals, and the Commerce
Department threatened a trade war. The Bush administration also mobilized
domestic business interests and encouraged trading partners Canada, Japan,
and China to weigh in.
Even with the scaled-back requirements, industry and environmental groups
agree that the legislation is a radical change. Greg Lebedev, the head of the
American Chemistry Council, calls the regime "a nightmare for companies who
do business and hard-line nationalists. And the 15 sovereign countries that make up the
EU are not bound by the same ideological and economic interests. This makes
compromise the name of the game. "You don't have winners and losers like in
the United States. Here if you get 50 percent you are happy," says Darcy
Nicolle, a European lobbyist with the Connecticut-based firm United
Technologies.
The ever-shifting balance of power means that European policymaking is much
more difficult for industry to control than in the United States. Each country
gets its turn at the presidency of the Council of the European Union, while
leadership within the European Commission is divided among the member
nations. With a highly paid and powerful bureaucracy, the "revolving door"
between politicians and industry is practically nonexistent.
In the United States, there is often little functional difference between, say, a
senator from Alaska and one from North Carolina. Whether the issue is
tobacco, health insurance, or nuclear power, corporate lobbying tactics in
Washington are the same: Give tens of thousands of dollars to candidates, hire
former officials who used to regulate the industry, look for sympathetic ears on
the relevant authorizing and appropriations committees, and use mass
mailings and front groups to produce the bogus grassroots support known as
"Astroturf." While American politicians are constantly in need of cash to run for
reelection, members of the EU's parliament generally spend a tiny amount on
campaigns. American lobbyists often express surprise when forced to argue an
issue on its merits in Europe rather than shake a few hands and pass on a
campaign check.
Differing histories and cultures also come into play. America was founded to
protect citizens from an intrusive state. In Europe, however, bureaucrats are
not so scorned and businesspeople not so widely revered. People tend to
believe that corporations, like children, will misbehave if left to themselves.
This "underlying socialist suspicion," as one lobbyist for a U.S. investment bank
calls it, shocks Americans when they encounter European regulators. Less
troubled by "big government," European countries' social-democratic welfare
system stands in stark contrast to the increasingly free-market (and often
explicitly pro-big-business) climate in Washington. European corporations
tolerate government interventions because many of them were, and in some
cases still are, closely connected to the government.
In the United States, we can't turn back 200 years of free-market capitalism.
But there are many things we can do to follow Europe's lead. So far, American
corporations have been the face of globalization, often with devastating results
for the environment as they take their factories to poor and unregulated
countries and propagate unsustainable consumption. But if Europe's green
globalization begins to take hold, we may be the ones left behind-unless the
Bush administration stops fighting progress and emulates the approach of
some forward-looking local officials.
Last summer, for example, a bipartisan coalition of northeastern states led by
New York's Republican governor George Pataki announced plans to create an
emissions trading system to combat global warming-in direct defiance of
White House policy. Thirteen states have mandated minimum percentages of
their total electricity that must be produced from renewable energy sources. In
California, the state legislature has enacted an EU-style ban on dangerous
flame-retardants. New Jersey officials recently began seeking natural-resource
damages from polluters; if they are successful, industrial giants like ExxonMobil
and Lockheed Martin will have to go beyond cleaning up their contaminated
sites and pay for polluted groundwater, lost recreational opportunities, and
other costs to the public. And the city of San Francisco has become the first
U.S. municipality to embrace the precautionary principle. If more and more
states and cities adopt similar laws, polluters will have nowhere to go.
In time, we may even elect some politicians like Karl-Heinz Florenz, the smallbusiness
owner and conservative German member of the EU parliament who
worked on the vehicle-recycling legislation. He says he wants to teach
Americans that environmental and economic policies cannot be separated.
Some Americans "believe economics is everything," says Florenz. "But we are
trying to find a healthy basis for our industry. You need good water, healthy
air, and clean soil."
Samuel Loewenberg is a journalist in Madrid. He reported this story from
Brussels, London, and Washington, D.C.
EUROPE LEADS THE WAY
While the Bush administration is lowering environmental standards, the
European Union is raising them, with laws to curb toxic pollution and waste
from manufacturing. Here are a few ways our allies are ensuring a greener
future-in Europe and beyond.
VEHICLE RECYCLING
As of July 2002, automakers are responsible for the recovery and recycling of
all new vehicles they put on the market.
BIOTECH CHECKS
The EU adopted labeling, traceability, and environmental safety guidelines for
genetically modified crops in the summer of 2003.
ELECTRONICS RECYCLING AND TOXICS BAN
By August 2004, EU member states will require European electronics
companies to pay for the collection and recycling of their products. By July
2006, all electronics makers selling to Europe must stop using some of the
most notorious toxic substances: lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent
chromium (the potential carcinogen featured in the film Erin Brockovich), and
the chemical flame-retardants PBDE and PBB.
CHEMICAL TESTING
The REACH (Registration, Evaluation, and Authorization of Chemicals) proposal
would require manufacturers to conduct rigorous safety and environmental
tests on 10,000 common chemicals and find alternatives for the most-toxic
substances. It could come into effect by late 2005.
GREEN DESIGN
This proposed legislation would mandate environmental-design guidelines for
all products, from computers to detergent bottles. The rules would ensure
energy efficiency, use of recycled materials, and limited emissions of
greenhouse gases and other hazardous substances. Developed at the request
of the member states, the policy has a very high chance of passage in some
form.
Research funding for this article was provided by The German Marshall Fund of the United States.
Copyright by Samuel Loewenberg and/or the publication in which it first appeared
Do not reprint without permission