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Denmark Announces Advisory Ban on PFCs in Paper Food Packaging

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The Danish government recently announced an advisory limit on the use of perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) in paper and cardboard food packaging, leading to a discussion this week about how the EU as a whole should confront this potential health issue. 

Announcing the limit – which is designed to act as a ban – environmental minister Eva Kjer Jansen commented that consumer safety is paramount and there should not be harmful fluorinated substances in the paper and paperboard in contact with food.

Germany, according to a ministry statement, has "good experience with a similar guideline limit, where most companies make use of the limit in the production of packaging made of cardboard and paper. Many companies also work already underway to find alternatives to the substances." However, the ministry says there is need for a European solution, and Jansen wants the European Commission to propose tighter regulation at EU-level.

In the meantime, NGO ChemTrust said Denmark would be within its rights to make the restrictions legally binding, given the lack of harmonized EU regulation for paper and board food contact materials.

"Given that Denmark does have a record of bringing in national controls on chemicals, it would be wise for companies to take notice – and I suspect that if they don’t, this could well help create pressure for a legal ban," said executive director Michael Warhurst.

The Danish Consumer Council said it is difficult to tell what effect the advisory limit will have, as there are no direct consequences for companies that do not comply.

But the council hopes the ministry’s action will help its campaign to stop the use of PFCs. "It's a signal for companies that a ban might be around the corner," said Christel Soegaard Kirkeby, of the council's Think Chemicals initiative. "Companies won't be able to say any more that their products are safe if they are not following government guidelines".

ChemTrust said it hopes Denmark’s move will trigger action by the Commission, both on PFCs and on the wider issue of "inadequate regulation" of chemicals in paper and paperboard food packaging. Meanwhile, the Commission’s Joint Research Center is conducting a study to evaluate whether additional EU measures are necessary for the regulation of non-plastic food contact materials such as paper and paperboard .

Perfluorinated Compounds (PFCs) are organofluorine compounds that have an ability to make products stain, grease, and water resistant, and are popular for their non-stick and stain-repellant uses. Due to these properties, PFCs are often used in paper food containers such as microwave popcorn bags and fast food wrappers. PFCs are considered persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and resist chemical, biological, and photolytic degradation in the environment. Scientists theorize these chemicals biomagnify in the food chain and then bioaccumulate in animal and human tissues. PFCs may be linked to persistant health issues such as thyroid dysfunction, higher cholesterol, as well as more serious complications such as immunotoxicity or liver dysfunction. 

For at least the last few years, various researchers in the industry have been testing effective substitutes for PFC coated paper products. Those who support a ban have voiced a belief that this could and should expedite the arrival of more natural coatings assumed to be safer and healthier when human consumption is involved. Those who are opposed to government regulating another chemical ban have pointed out that data linking supposed illnesses and health complications to food-contact paper coating have generally failed to show a clear or direct correlation between any sudden onsets of illness.
 

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