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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs v Downs [2009] EWCA Civ 664 (07 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/664.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 664, [2010] JPL 197, [2009] 3 CMLR 46, [2010] Env LR 7, [2009] ACD 71 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISON
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE COLLINS
C0/4483/2004
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
____________________
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GEORGINA DOWNS |
Respondent |
____________________
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Michael Fordham QC & Emma Dixon (instructed by Messrs Foresters) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : Monday, 18th, Tuesday, 19th & Wednesday, 20th May 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sullivan :
This is an appeal against the Order dated 15th December 2008 of Collins J. in which he granted the Respondent a Declaration that the Appellant was not acting in compliance with Directive 91/414 EEC ("the Directive") in the respects identified in his judgment [2008] EWHC 2666 (Admin), and ordered the Appellant to reconsider and as necessary amend his policy in accordance with the terms of the judgment.
"The Government's top priority is to ensure that the safety arrangements we have in place protect the public. The independent scientific advice to me is very clear that the existing system provides full reassurance on that score. For this reason I have decided against the introduction of compulsory no-spray 'buffer zones' around agricultural land.
But despite existing advice, there is clearly a perception that current arrangements are inadequate. I have listened to the concerns of campaigners who hold strong views about how crop spraying has affected their health. I believe the time is now right for a fresh and independent appraisal of the basis for risk assessment.
That is why I have asked the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution to examine the evidence on which the current system is based and the reasons for people's concerns. The Commission, as an independent body, will adopt its own approach to the question. Its conclusions may also inform the way in which Defra, across its work, deals with uncertainty in science and public perceptives on risk."
Defra is advised by an independent committee, the Advisory Committee on Pesticides ("ACP"), Professor Coggon, the then Chairman of the ACP said:
"The considered view of the ACP, based on all the available evidence, is that current safeguards on crop spraying provide a high degree of protection to health and reassurance to the public. We recognise, however, that some public concern remains.
I therefore wholeheartedly support the Minister's decision to invite the Royal Commission also to look at this area. I and my colleagues on the advisory committee look forward to assisting the Commission in its work and await its findings with interest."
"serious concerns about the current method of assessing resident and bystander exposure to pesticides." (3.50)[1]
It recommended:
"that the current approach for assessing resident and bystander exposure should, with some urgency, be replaced by a computational model which is probabilistic, looks at a wider range of possible exposure routes and more robustly reflects worst case outcomes." (3.53)
"while there is a need for further empirical data to confirm the adequacy of the current approach to bystander risk assessment, there is no indication of a problem from the data that are currently available " (3.32).
The ACP disagreed with the recommendation that a probabilistic model should be developed, and favoured
"a simpler approach of the type that is currently employed".
However, the ACP saw
"merit in further developing the scientific information base for bystander (and other) exposure modelling". (3.34)
"44. The Government believes that the current approvals
system for pesticides, which is at the forefront of
international standards, provides adequate protection
for both spray operators and members of the public.
The Royal Commission noted that "the present
approach may be conservative and protective in its
treatment of targets…" and the Government agrees
with this.
45. The Royal Commission also noted that they could not
agree that "…this [conservative and protective
treatment] has been conclusively or transparently
demonstrated for the exposure process". The
Government agrees that the current model for resident
and bystander exposure needs to be reviewed against a
more transparent model which clearly takes into
account a wide range of possible exposure routes, both
during and after spraying, and also addresses the
changes in spraying practice and equipment that have
taken place since the current model was developed.
46. The Government believes that it is important to
develop the model using the most appropriate
techniques that will provide the best assessment of
potential exposure, and be transparent and
demonstrably robust to ensure members of the public
can have greater confidence in the approvals system.
New field trials designed to measure exposures under
more testing application conditions had already
commenced before the Royal Commission's study
concluded.
47. In developing the model Government will be
consulting a number of experts, including a
representative covering the Royal Commission's
interests, on how the model should be developed.
Computational probabilistic techniques will be
considered as part of this process alongside other
methodologies. Techniques and conditions for
validating the model will include wind tunnel
evaluation, field tests and non-standard conditions.
Defra's Chief Scientific Adviser will ensure the
development of the model meets acceptable scientific
standards."
"a proportionate response to the level of uncertainty surrounding the model for exposure of residents and bystanders currently used as part of the approvals process." (58)
"The claim….was against the alleged failure by the defendant to comply with the obligations imposed by the relevant E.C. Directive (91/414/EEC) in that the domestic regime did not provide for the necessary protection of public health, in particular the health of those such as the claimant who were residents living near fields which were subjected to crop spraying. Three grounds were relied on. First, it was argued that there was no risk assessment capable of identifying and properly guarding against the effect on residents as opposed to those who might happen at the particular time to be near the field, properly described as bystanders. Secondly, the approach adopted by the defendant that there should be no serious harm to human health was wrong in law: the Directive did not qualify the requirement that the use of pesticides should not result in harm to human health. Thirdly, it was said that the defendant's failure to act on the RCEP's conclusion that a more precautionary approach was needed was erroneous and that at the very least cogent and clear reasons were needed to justify such a failure. There was included a submission that the failure meant that there was a breach of Article 8 of the ECHR in that the interference with the claimant's private life was disproportionate and not justified by Article 8(2)."
"concerns the authorisation, placing on the market, use and control within the Community of plant protection products in commercial form and the placing on the market and control within the community of active substances intended for a use specified in Article 2(1)." (Article 1.1).
"Active substances" are defined in Article 2.4 as:
"4. 'active substances'
substances or micro-organisms, including viruses,
having general or specific action:
4.1. Against harmful organisms; or
4.2. on plants, parts of plants or plant
products;"
"Plant protection products" are:
"active substances and preparations containing one or more active substances, put up in the form in which they are supplied to the user…."
In ordinary language (and in this judgment) plant protection products are the pesticides that farmers and growers spray on the fields and in the orchards.
"1. Member States shall ensure that a plant protection product is not authorised unless:
(a) its active substances are listed in Annex I and any conditions laid down therein are fulfilled,
and, with regard to the following points (b), (c), (d)
and (e), pursuant to the uniform principles provided
for in Annex VI, unless:
(b) it is established, in the light of current scientific
and technical knowledge and shown from appraisal
of the dossier provided for in Annex III, that when
used in accordance with Article 3(3), and having
regard to all normal conditions under which it may
be used and to the consequences of its use:
(i) it is sufficiently effective;
(ii) it has no unacceptable effect on, plants or
plant products;
(iii) it does not cause unnecessary suffering and
pain to vertebrates to be controlled;
(iv) it has no harmful effect on human or
animal health, directly or indirectly (e.g.
through drinking water, food or feed) or on
groundwater;
(v) it has no unacceptable influence on the
environment, having particular regard to
the following considerations:
- its fate and distribution in the
environment, particularly
contamination of water including
drinking water and groundwater.
- its impact on non-target species."
"Mr Jay [QC, who appeared on behalf of the Appellant] submitted that compliance with Article VI was sufficient for the purposes of the Directive. That would only be so provided that the compliance adequately covered the risks to bystanders and residents." (paragraph 21 of the judgment, see also paragraphs 51 and 52).
"5. Whereas, in view of the hazards, there are rules in
most Member States governing the authorisation of
plant health products; whereas these rules present
differences which constitute barriers not only to trade
in plant protection products but also to trade in plant
products, and thereby directly affect the establishment
and operation of the internal market;
6. Whereas it is therefore desirable to eliminate such
barriers by harmonizing the provisions laid down in
the Member States;
7. Whereas uniform rules on the conditions and
procedures for the authorization of plant protection
products must be applied by the Member States;"
9. "Whereas the provisions governing authorization must
ensure a high standard of protection, which, in
particular, must prevent the authorization of plant
protection products whose risks to health, groundwater
and the environment and human and animal health
should take priority over the objective of improving
plant production;
10. Whereas it is necessary, at the time when plant
protection products are authorized, to make sure that,
when properly applied for the purpose intended, they
are sufficiently effective and have no unacceptable
effect on plants or plant products, no unacceptable
influence on the environment in general and, in
particular, no harmful effect on human or animal
health or on groundwater;"
"16. Whereas it is in the interests of free movement of plant
products as well as of plant protection products that
authorization granted by one Member State, and tests
carried out with a view to authorization, should be
recognized by other Member States, unless certain
agricultural, plant health and environmental (including
climatic) conditions relevant to the use of the products
concerned are not comparable in the regions
concerned; whereas to this end there is a need to
harmonize the methods of experimentation and control
applied by the Member States for the purpose of
granting authorization;"
"to the extent that the uniform principles [in Annex VI] have been adopted in accordance with Article 23, where the product contains only active substances listed in Annex I, also authorise the placing of that product on the market in its territory…."
"1. The principles developed in this Annex aim to ensure that evaluations and decisions with regard to authorization of plant protection products, provided they are chemical preparations, results in the implementation of the requirements of Article 4 (1) (b), (c) (d) and (e) of this Directive by all the Member States at the high level of protection of human and animal health and the environment."
"27. With regard more particularly to the protection of
health, groundwater and the environment, Article
4(1)(b) of the basic directive provides that the Member
States are not to authorize a plant protection product
unless, in accordance with the above mentioned
uniform principles, it is established that that product
has no harmful effect on human or animal health,
either directly or indirectly, or on groundwater and has
no unacceptable influence on the environment…"
"160 Article 5(1) of Directive 91/414 provides that, for an active substance to be included in Annex I to that directive, it must be possible to expect that, in the light of current scientific and technical knowledge, use of plant protection products containing that active substance, consequent on application consistent with good plant protection practice, will not have any harmful effects on human health as provided for in Article 4(1)(b)(iv) and (v) of that directive.
161 It follows from that provision, interpreted in combination with the precautionary principle, that, in the domain of human health, the existence of solid evidence which, while not resolving scientific uncertainty, may reasonably raise doubts as to the safety of a substance, justifies, in principle, the refusal to include that substance in Annex I to Directive 91/414. The precautionary principle is designed to prevent potential risks. By contrast, purely hypothetical risks, based on mere hypotheses that have not been scientifically confirmed, cannot be accepted (Case T-392/02 Solvay Pharmaceuticals v Council [2003] ECR II-4555, paragraph 129).
162 In order to determine whether the requirements laid down in Article 5(1) of Directive 91/414 have been fulfilled in regard to human health, that provision refers back to Article 4(1)(b)(iv) of the directive which provides, in essence, that it must be established that a plant protection product has no harmful effect on human health, directly or indirectly, or on groundwater.
163 It should be pointed out, however, that it can be seen from Article 4(1)(a) of Directive 91/414 that in order to fulfil the requirements laid down in Article 4(1)(b) of that directive, the uniform principles provided for in Annex VI must be applied. Moreover, the second recital in the preamble to Directive 97/57, fixing the content of Annex VI, states that that annex must lay down uniform principles to ensure the application of the requirements of Article 4(1)(b), (c), (d) and (e) of Directive 91/414 in a uniform manner and as stringently as is sought by the directive.
164 It follows that Article 4(1)(b)(iv) of Directive 91/414, to which Article 5(1)(b) of that directive expressly refers, requires compliance with the uniform principles laid down in Annex VI."
"that in order to fulfil the requirements laid down in Article 4 (1) (b) of [the Directive], the uniform principles provided for in Annex VI must be applied."
This echoes the judgment of the ECJ in the European Parliament case, that a plant protection product is not to be authorised under Article 4(1)(b)
"unless in accordance with the aforementioned uniform principles, it is established that the product has no harmful effect on human health…." (paragraph 27).
(1) Defra's "Bystander exposure" model was not a "suitable
calculation model" for the purposes of paragraph 7.2.2 in
Annex III of the Directive in relation to residents.
(2) Defra's authorisation process does not take account of "local
effects", even though they are, he submitted, within the scope
of the Directive as shown by paragraph 2(c) in Part A of
Annex VI, and paragraph 1(b) in the General
Principles governing Evaluation in Part B of Annex VI.
Paragraph 2 in Part B states that the specific principles of
evaluation are to be applied without prejudice to the general
principles.
(3) Although Defra, through the ACP, receives reports (including
the Health and Safety Executive's Pesticides Incident
Appraisal Panel (PIAP's) reports) of incidents involving
pesticides where harm has been caused to
human health, or where doubts have been raised as to the
safety of pesticides under the regime which presently exists
(see paragraph 161 of the Kingdom of Sweden case above), it
does nothing about them, contrary to the provisions of Articles
4.5 and 4.6, 7 and 11 of the Directive.
I will deal with these three criticisms of the authorisation
process in turn.
"The acceptable operator exposure level is the maximum amount of active substance to which the operator may be exposed without any adverse health effects. The AOEL is expressed as milligrams of the chemical per kilogram body weight of the operator. The AOEL is based on the highest level at which no adverse effect is observed in tests in the most relevant animal species or, if appropriate data are available, in humans. "
"2.4.1.1 No authorization shall be granted if the extent of
operator exposure in handling and using the
plant protection product under the proposed
conditions of use, including dose and application
method, exceeds the AOEL."
"2.4.1.4. Member States shall evaluate the possibility of
exposure of other humans (bystanders or workers
exposed after the application of the plant
protection product) or animals to the active
substance and/or to other toxicologically relevant
compounds in the plant protection product under
the proposed conditions of use.
This evaluation will take into consideration the
following information:
(i) the toxicological and metabolism studies
on the active substance as provided for in
Annex II and the results of the evaluation
thereof, including the acceptable operator
exposure level;
(ii) the toxicological studies provided for in
Annex III, including where appropriate
dermal absorption studies;
(iii) other relevant information on the plant
protection product as provided for in
Annex III such as:
- re-entry periods, necessary waiting
periods or other precautions to protect
humans and animals…."
This is reflected in paragraph 2.4.1.4 in Part C of Annex VI which directs Members States that when making decisions on authorisation:
"Waiting and re-entry safety periods or other precautions must be such that the exposure of bystanders or workers exposed after the application of the plant protection product does not exceed the AOEL levels established for the active substance or toxicologically relevant compound(s) in the plant protection product nor any limit values established for those compounds in accordance with the Community provisions referred to in point 2.4.1.1."
"No authorization shall be granted if the airborne concentration of the active substance under the proposed conditions of use is such that either the AOEL or the limit values for operators, bystanders or workers as referred to in Part C, point 2.4.1, are exceeded."
"Bystander exposure
Bystanders can be exposed during the application of plant protection products. Sufficient information and data must be reported to provide a basis for the selection of appropriate conditions of use, including the exclusion of bystanders from treatment areas and separation distances.
Aim of the estimation
An estimation shall be made, using where available a suitable calculation model in order to permit an evaluation of the bystander exposure likely to arise under the proposed conditions of use.
Circumstances in which required
An estimation of bystander exposure must always be completed.
Estimation conditions
An estimation of bystander exposure must be made for each type of application method. The estimation shall be made with the assumption that bystanders do not use any personal protective equipment.
Measurement of bystander exposure may be required when estimates indicate a cause for concern."
"96. In principle, such assessments are subject to limited judicial review. According to the Court's case-law, where a Community authority is called upon, in the performance of its duties, to make complex assessments, it enjoys a wide measure of discretion, the exercise of which is subject to a limited judicial review in the course of which the Community judicature may not substitute its assessment of the facts for the assessment made by the authority concerned. Thus, in such cases, the Community judicature must restrict itself to examining the accuracy of the findings of fact and law made by the authority concerned and to verifying, in particular, that the action taken by that authority is not vitiated by a manifest error or a misuse of powers and that it did not clearly exceed the bounds of its discretion."
"must be based on scientific principles, preferably recognised at international level… and be made with the benefit of expert advice."
"3.43 The ACP in its July 2003 discussion concluded in the
paper: Final Minutes of the 301st Meeting of the
Advisory Committee on Pesticides held on 10 July
2003:
3.1.3 Members felt that the paper provided a
good review of the information available, and
that the models used were appropriate and could
be identified as worst-case scenarios.
3.1.4 A range of issues arising from the paper
were discussed by members. It was agreed that
the approach currently used to assess bystander
risks is generally protective with the possible
exception of soil fumigants. Further data were
identified as necessary to complete the
assessment for dithianon and trifluralin.
3.44 We consider that the present approach may be
conservative and protective in its treatment of targets,
but in view of the absence of any attempt to model the
complexity of bystander exposure and the probability
of extreme values, we cannot agree that this has been
conclusively or transparently demonstrated for the
exposure process. We cannot therefore support the
ACP's unequivocal conclusion above.
3.50 We have serious concerns about the current method of
assessing resident and bystander exposure to
pesticides. Although uncertainty factors are built into
the AOEL, they are there to cover issues related to
toxicology and do not address the variability of
exposure or the uncertainties in exposure assessment.
3.53 We recommend that the current approach for assessing
resident and bystander exposure should, with some
urgency, be replaced by a computational model which
is probabilistic, looks at a wider range of possible
exposure routes and more robustly reflects worst-case
outcomes. The model should be rigorously validated
by wind tunnel and field tests designed for the
purpose, including non-standard conditions to test the
sensitivity of the model predictions. As a first step,
whoever takes ownership of the creation of relevant
data should undertake a through review of the relevant
experimental work that already exists.
3.56 In the short term, whilst the new probabilistic model is
being developed and introduced, we recommend that
all actual spraying practice be brought into line with
the aspirations of the Green Code recommendations
(chapter 5) including giving proper regard to the
importance of optimal timing of the application and
therefore efficacy of the pesticide. This will require
appropriate monitoring arrangements and sanctions for
non-compliance. These short-term practical measures
must contain provisions for recording relevant data."
"This document does not attempt to address the derivation of acceptable exposure levels for local effects (e.g. irritation and sensitisation) produced by exposure to plant protection products. For professional operators, it is envisaged that such effects will normally be addressed by classification and labelling and the use of appropriate personal protective equipment. However, the potential for acute local effects to occur in workers, amateur operators, bystanders and residents should be considered, for example if the spray dilution is classifiable as an irritant, and appropriate risk management measures taken. If local effects are produced in inhalation studies, these should be taken into account to ensure a systemic AOEL is adequately protective for the local effects."
"It does not intend to produce legally binding effects and by its nature does not prejudice any measure taken by a Member State within the implementation prerogatives under Annex II, III and VI of [the Directive]…"
"(c) take into consideration other relevant technical or scientific information they reasonably possess with regard to the…. potentially adverse effects of the plant protection product, its components or its residues."
"(b) identify the hazards arising, assess their significance and make a judgment on the likely risks to humans…. "
Mr Fordham pointed out that the "Specific Principles" in Part B of Annex VI, none of which requires an assessment of the "local impact" of pesticides on residents, must be implemented by the Member States "without prejudice to the general principles" referred to above (see paragraph 2 in Part B).
"3.31 A useful further check, therefore, on the adequacy of risk assessment comes from data on acute pesticide poisoning. Reporting of minor incidents to the enforcement authorities, as monitored by the Pesticide Incidents Appraisal Panel (PIAP), is known to be incomplete, and it is often difficult to determine whether the illnesses reported have arisen from toxicity, through non-toxic effects of exposure, or coincidentally and unrelated to pesticides. More severe poisoning episodes, of sufficient severity to warrant hospital admission, should, however, be more reliably recorded. Hospital Episode Statistics data for England indicate that each year there are approximately 200 admissions to hospital nationally for accidental pesticide poisoning (ACP 16 (300/2003), and preliminary findings from a more detailed investigation of such admissions in adults aged 16-69 years, show that the health effects are usually not serious, and very rarely if ever arise from bystander exposure to agricultural pesticides. Exposures from mishaps in users (either at work or in the home), and from unsatisfactory storage, figure much more frequently. A similar pattern is apparent in follow-up enquiries about pesticide poisoning to the National Poisons Information Service (ACP 22 (315/2005), ACP11 (316 (2005)).
3.32 Overall, therefore, while there is a need for further empirical data to confirm the adequacy of the current approach to bystander risk assessment, there is no indication of a problem from the data that are currently available."
"37. The Pesticide Incident Appraisal Panel (PIAP)
contributes to the post-approval monitoring of
pesticides by examining the evidence obtained by
Health and Safety Executive inspectors investigating
complaints of ill health allegedly arising from
exposure to pesticides. PIAP's primary function is to
identify trends in ill health that may be associated with
pesticide usage. The Government recognises that
PIAP was not developed to assess causality in
individual cases.
38. The Government considers that any changes to PIAP,
including the development of new mechanisms, will
need to be integrated with any wider changes to the
regulatory and policy structure for pesticides proposed
as part of the implementation of the recommendations
of the Hampton review Reducing administrative
burdens: effective inspection and enforcement. The
Government will await the outcome of discussions on
these wider issues before considering any potential
implementation of changes to PIAP."
"1. Where a Member State has valid reasons to consider that a product which it has authorized or is bound to authorize under Article 10 constitutes a risk to human or animal health or the environment, it may provisionally restrict or prohibit the use and/or sale of that product on its territory. It shall immediately inform the Commission and the other Member States of such action and give reasons for its decision.
2. A decision shall be taken on the matter within three months in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 19."
"It is not however all by any means. There is in my judgment solid evidence produced by the claimant that residents have suffered harm to their health (her own ill health is an example) or, at the very least, doubts have reasonably been raised as to the safety of pesticides under the regime which presently exists: see the Sweden case at paragraph 161. It is clear that the precautionary principle must apply." (paragraph 40, Judgment).
"I recognise that it is not easy to attribute a particular cause to many chronic illnesses and a view that a cause has been identified may be wrong. But there is evidence that some long term illnesses may be attributable to pesticide exposure."
"But there is much more positive evidence that local effects are attributable to exposure. The dvd makes it clear that those effects do in many cases amount to more than merely transient and trifling harm. I appreciate that the dvds have been presented to and considered by the ACP and they have not changed their approach. Had they appreciated that the evidence was solid and that the conditions come within the scope of the Directive inasmuch as they constituted harm to human health, a different approach ought in my view to have been adopted. There has in my judgment been both a failure to have regard to material considerations and a failure to apply the Directive properly. It is in the context relevant to note that the view that local effects need not be taken into account, albeit apparently in the European Commission Guidance, cannot be justified. The reason for their exclusion is, it seems, because packet warnings can deal with them. But, as I have said, that cannot possibly help bystanders. In any event, there is sufficient material to raise a real doubt as to long term harm in some cases. They may be rare, but it is to be noted that in the Sweden case one study was regarded as sufficient to require paraquat to be removed from Annex I."
"4.31 However, while appropriate investigation is important in the clinical management of individual patients with suspected chronic pesticide toxicity, we think it unlikely that the registration of such cases would usefully contribute to the assessment of risks, since there is no valid method by which chronic diseases can be attributed to pesticide exposure in the individual case. At best, a reporting scheme for suspected chronic effects of pesticide exposure would provide an index of perceptions about risk in the medical profession and general public, and perhaps have some therapeutic value in responding to the needs of patients to have their concerns recognised."
(emphasis added)
The ACP agreed that the PIAP system required improvement, but added:
"We can see little scientific value, however, in a reporting scheme for illness that people believe is a chronic effect of exposure to pesticides, since it is rarely if ever possible to make a meaningful attribution to pesticides in the individual case. At best, such a system would provide information about the types of illness that people believe are an effect of pesticide exposure, and about levels of concern in the community."
(emphasis added) (6.17).
"Residents and bystanders attributed a range of chronic health effects to crop spraying, some of which followed and some of which were unconnected with acute symptoms."
In respect of chronic ill health the RCEP said this, in
paragraph 2.65 of the Report:"
"2.65 Based on the conclusions from our visits and our understanding of the biological mechanisms with which pesticides interact, it is plausible that there could be a link between bystander pesticide exposure and chronic ill health. We find that we are not able to rule out this possibility. We recommend that a more precautionary approach is taken with passive exposure to pesticides. The existing uncertainties indicate an urgent need for research to investigate the size and nature of the problem and any underlying mechanisms that link pesticide spraying to ill health." (emphasis added)
"On the evidence we have received we cannot draw firm conclusions on causality, but we are persuaded that it is possible that some cases of ill health could, on further investigation be shown to be due to complex effects following exposure to pesticides."
This conclusion is reflected in the guarded terms in which it dealt with the ill health effects attributed to pesticide exposure when dealing with the PIAP system.
Having criticised the deficiencies of the system, the RCEP said:
"2.85 … We believe that this system needs to be radically
reformed, by the introduction of detailed clinical
investigation, and extended to cover chronic cases.
This is critical for an adequate understanding of the ill
health effects attributed to pesticide exposure. To
ascertain whether pesticides are indeed the cause of
these adverse health effects it is important, not only
that the numbers should be properly recorded through
well-designed proactive surveillance methods, but also
that a proactive investigative service should examine
reported cases, where possible using modern
laboratory methods such as imaging." (emphasis
added)
"There is no dispute that some people who have been exposed to pesticides have become ill. The dispute has concerned the causality and underlying basis for these illnesses. On the evidence that we have received we cannot draw firm conclusions on causality. But we are persuaded that it is possible that some cases of ill health could, on further investigation, be shown to be due to complex effects following exposure to pesticides. (6.4)
Based on the conclusions from our visits and our understanding of the biological mechanisms with which pesticides interact, it is plausible that there could be a link between resident and bystander pesticide exposure and chronic ill health. We find that we are not able to rule out this possibility. We recommend that a more precautionary approach is taken with passive exposure to pesticides. The existing uncertainties indicate an urgent need for research to investigate the size and nature of the problem and any underlying mechanisms that link pesticide spraying to ill health." (6.20)
"In its conclusions the Royal Commission states that "There is no dispute that some people who have been exposed to pesticides have become ill. The dispute has concerned the causality and underlying basis for these illnesses. On the evidence that we have received we cannot draw firm conclusions on causality. The Government accepts that if a resident or bystander were to accidentally receive a high exposure to certain pesticides then some acute adverse effects might occur. One of the aims of the precautionary measures set out in the PPP Code is to avoid such circumstances occurring. The Government agrees with the Royal Commission that the evidence does not allow a firm conclusion to be drawn on causality in relation to chronic ill health.
The Government believes that being unable to rule out the possibility of a link cannot be considered a basis to support the recommendation of an urgent need for research into any potential chronic ill health effects from pesticide exposure of resident and bystanders. Similarly there is no scientific basis for additional precaution beyond the already precautionary approach currently adopted."
"the medical tests carried out on the Claimant provide very powerful reasons for concluding that there has been the necessary cause and effect."
"utilises fat biopsies to test for pesticide levels and to prove definite exposure in people suffering from suspected pesticide related ill health."
"No doubt that [the Respondent's] chronic ill health is due to her exposures to mixtures of agricultural pesticides of various classes, particularly OPs, carbamates and pyrethroids. There is a considerable body of scientific evidence to support her case."
"We appreciate the fact that the approach taken by the ACP is in line with approaches taken more widely in risk assessment in other areas such as food safety and at EU and international level. Nevertheless we remain concerned that these approaches underestimate the full range of variability in the population. We are also concerned that the two ten fold safety factors may be used to suggest that there is a degree of security in respect of weaknesses elsewhere in the risk assessment process such as the exposure assessment. We do not set out to criticise the ACP or suggest that UK practice is in anyway less rigorous that elsewhere. Indeed we recommend that the UK Government also presses the EU Commission to reassess its analysis in line with the recommendation of one of its own Committees in 2002. We note that the ACP supports our recommendation. "
"b) no-one should develop any serious illness through the use of pesticides" (emphasis added)."
The reference to "serious" illness was repeated in the section of the Guide dealing
with "Reviews of pesticides that are already approved" which said that the aim of
the regulatory process was:
"that nobody should be made seriously ill through the use of a pesticide in an approved manner…"
" In my view the word 'serious' appears incompatible with the precise and definite language used in both the EU Directive 91/414/EEC and the UK PPP Regulations 2005, regarding the unconditional degree of priority required to be given for the protection of human health. The UK legislation clearly states the Secretary of State shall not approve a plant protection product unless it has been satisfied that it "has no harmful effect directly or indirectly on human or animal health…"
I would be grateful, therefore, for clarification as to whether Professor Coggon had the authorisation of any Minister prior to reconstructing and thus reinterpreting the language used in the legislation to include the word 'serious' and if you will now review the use of this word in the context referred to."
"You asked for clarification in relation to Miss Downs' first question concerning the interpretation of the language used in the legislation about the harmful effects of pesticides. I can confirm that no-one has "reconstructed" or "reinterpreted" the wording of this legislation. I believe that Professor Coggon the former Chairman of the ACP has, on several occasions, explained to Miss Downs that our interpretation of the legislation is that which has consistently been applied in the UK and throughout the European Community.
As Professor Coggon has explained, in residents and bystanders a "serious" adverse effect is anything other than transient minor irritant symptoms (of the same sort that might be produced when visiting the local swimming pool). Discomfort associated with unpleasant odours would not be considered serious. In workers and operators a small risk of skin sensitisation may be considered acceptable.
To reiterate; any symptom or health effect more serious than those described above would be classed as "serious". This is the interpretation adopted throughout the European Community.
I trust that this matter has now been clarified to your, and Miss Downs' satisfaction."
"A major aim of pesticide regulation is that no-one should be made seriously ill through toxic effects of pesticides when they are used in accordance with the conditions of their approval. Ideally, there would be no adverse effects whatsoever, but achieving this would lead to major inconsistencies with other areas of risk management. For example, it would be unreasonable to ban a product because it caused occasional skin sensitisation in operators, when occupational exposure to other, more potent skin sensitisers such as epoxy adhesives is permitted. Similarly, unpleasant smells and minor and transient eye irritation may be tolerated, as they are when produced by, for example, the occasional bonfire. Nevertheless, regulatory controls on pesticides are more stringent than for almost all other industrial products."
"the use of the adverb 'seriously' is unfortunate, but the examples being given are likely to be categorised as merely transient and trifling." (paragraph 48 of the judgment)
Before Collins J. both parties had accepted that any harm to human health
which could properly be regarded as "more than merely transient or trifling" fell within a "harmful effect on human health" for the purposes of the Directive: see paragraph 24 of the judgment.
i. " As I have said, the word serious should not have been used. It suggests an erroneous approach. However although it should be removed from any guidance, if the approach is and has always been as Professor Coggon suggested in the article quoted in paragraph 48, it may not in itself have resulted in an erroneous decision. However, since the defendant accepts that harm will be material if more than merely trifling and transient, he must make his decisions on that basis."
i. "72. 6.38 We believe that adherence to some of the recommended conditions under the Green Code [PPP Code] should become statutory duties. These include maximum wind speed, spraying practice as specified on the label, boom height and vehicle speed
1. Further research on refining the resident and bystander exposure model should lead to recommendations for revised spraying conditions for all factors relevant to minimising exposure, and thus to a revision of the statutory obligations. (5.73-5.74)
73. The Code of Practice (PPP Code) for using plant protection products has a special position in law. As it is a statutory code, if a spray operator, be they a farmer or commercial contractor, follows the advice in the code they will be doing enough to keep within the law. They may also be able to work in a different way from the code so long as that way is equally as safe. A court would find someone guilty of a breach of pesticide law if they have not followed the code and cannot show, when asked, that they have still kept within the law. This potentially allows farmers to adapt their practice to local circumstances including the needs of local residents. It also means that farmers can adopt practices that go beyond the PPP Code, or which result in improved efficacy, for example using more dilute pesticide than recommended on the label, and therefore potentially reduce pesticide use overall.
74. The Government believes that the current statutory status of the PPP Code is sufficient and that making adherence to some of the recommended conditions statutory duties would not be beneficial. Doing so could lead to the reduction in some local best practice and potentially an increase in the level of risk associated with bystander and resident exposure.
75. The Government recognises that further research on refining the resident and bystander exposure model could lead to a greater understanding of the conditions and factors which minimise the potential for such exposure. The Government will keep the advice in the PPP Code under review both in the light of the Royal Commission's report and future research on resident and bystander exposure. If such research indicates that modification of the advice is required this will be considered along with the legal status of such advice."
ii. "109. 6.51 We recommend that records of which pesticides, and when and where they have been used, should be directly available from the persons responsible for crop spraying upon request to any resident and bystander and to researchers investigating the health effects of resident and bystander exposure. (5.84)
110. In 2004, Alun Michael the then Minister for Rural Affairs and Local Environment Quality, made a commitment to introduce new legal measures to require farmers and growers to keep records of pesticides used on crops and to make those records available to the public via a third party. Since that time this commitment has been superseded by new European legislation (EC Regulation 852/2004 on the Hygiene of Foodstuffs, EC Regulation 183/2005 on the Hygiene of Feed for Livestock). Under this legislation farmers and spray operators are now legally required to keep a record of their spraying activity and these records can be made available through a suitable mechanism.
111. In the case of acute exposure where a resident or bystander has come into immediate contact with a pesticide as it is being sprayed, the Government believes it is highly unlikely that a spray operator would not be prepared to immediately inform the affected person or a doctor of what was being sprayed. The Government does not feel that a statutory requirement of disclosure is necessary for this situation as it is already covered in the PPP Code. The PPP Code states that "If a [spray operator] or people they are working with or near feel unwell as result of being exposed to pesticides, they should think about getting medical attention (depending on the nature and severity of the symptoms)" it further recommends that "information on the pesticide involved, labels, data sheets and possible cause of contamination should be sent with the patient". Government will review the wording of the PPP Code to determine whether this advice needs further clarification for the specific context of acute exposure of a resident or bystander.
112. More generally the Government agrees that residents and bystanders concerned about both acute and longer term chronic exposure should have access to information relating to pesticide use. The Government believes that most farmers would be willing to engage in a dialogue with residents, to address their concerns and provide them with appropriate information if requested, and that a statutory requirement is not necessary or appropriate. The Government is not aware of an existing scheme where one individual can demand this type of information directly from another and they are required by law to supply it.
113. The Government does recognise that there may be circumstances where such a dialogue is not appropriate or possible and that in these cases the use of a third party is most appropriate. Such a mechanism would allow records to be requested, on a case-by-case basis, and supplied in an appropriate format and timescale to meet the requirements of both the farmer and the requester. The availability of a third party will also help prevent vexatious requests for information.
114. The Government will consider a pilot approach using a central bureau, to accept inquiries and gather data from farmers. Information would be requested on a case-by-case basis in order to minimise the overall burden. The level of demand for such information and, therefore, the burden which would potentially be placed upon farmers and spray operators is not known. A pilot approach would allow an accurate assessment of the level of demand and the potential administrative burden as well as the opportunity to explore some of the practical issues before any decision is made on a long-term approach."
iii. "115. 6.52 We recommend that the residents living next to fields that are to be sprayed be given prior notification of what substances are to be sprayed, where and when. The results of the pilot study in this area announced by the government should be treated as an exercise to determine how best to provide information, not as an opportunity to re-examine the principle of doing so, which should be accepted (5.79).
116. The Government recognises that notification can assist residents to make informed decisions regarding their behaviour in relation to pesticide spraying, should they wish to do so.
117. The Government considers that where a resident expresses concern about a farmer's use of pesticides it is good practice to give information about the pesticide and the reason for using it. It is also good practice to tell people who occupy land, premises or houses close to the area being sprayed. This is reflected in the guidance within the PPP Code.
118. A pilot study on prior notification was announced in 2004 by Alun Michael the then Minister for Rural Affairs and Local Environment Quality. The results of this study indicated that when residents' awareness had been raised through an introductory letter 75% expressed an interest in notification of spraying and that this dropped to 8% when some action was required on their part, for example a phone call, to obtain such information. Based on these findings there is no economic justification for requiring all adjacent residents to be notified in advance of all spraying events relative to a more targeted local approach. Provision of information does not guarantee any precautionary action will be taken by the recipient, Government would need to take other measures to ensure any health risks were addressed and therefore, the need for full notification can not be justified as a protective measure.
119. Application of pesticides in accordance with best practice and greatest efficacy requires quite specific weather conditions which can change rapidly on a day-to-day or even an hour by hour basis meaning that planned spraying is often cancelled or the decision to spray is made at the last minute. If a resident is notified in advance of spraying there is a risk that they may decide to take action as a result of this notification but that the spraying itself may be cancelled. This could lead to residents taking action on many more occasions than necessary. Similarly having made the effort to notify residents there is a risk that a farmer may feel constrained to spray in less than optimum conditions reducing the efficacy of the pesticide and potentially needing to increase the overall amount of pesticides used.
120. The Government believes that the above situations are best addressed through dialogue between the farmer and a resident so that both parties can understand the implications of notification, can consider alternative approaches which may satisfy the resident's concerns and if the resident would still like to be notified identify the most suitable means and timing of doing this.
121. The Government believes that making prior notification to all residents of every spraying event a statutory requirement would be highly bureaucratic and potentially reduce the ability of farmers to engage in such local best practice. The Government is committed to working with the various organisations representing the full range of stakeholders to identify how greater dialogue between farmers and residents can be encouraged and to develop ways in which farmers can be supported in providing information to residents. We will also examine the language in the PPP Code to determine if this can be amended to further encourage such local best practice."
i. "severe environmental pollution may affect individuals' well being and prevent them from enjoying their homes in such a way as to affect their private and family life adversely, without, however, seriously endangering their health." Lopez Ostra v Spain 20 EHRR 277, paragraph 51.
b. However, in that case, as in Fadeyeva v Russia (2007) 45 EHRR 10 it had been established that (a) the environmental pollution had had a severe impact on the complainant's quality of life; and (b) the responsible authorities had failed to take appropriate legal steps to deal with the pollution. In Guerra v Italy 26 EHRR 357:
i. "it was not disputed that the inhabitants of Macedonia were at risk from the factory in question and that the state authorities had in their possession information which would have enabled the inhabitants to assess this risk and take steps to avert it": see McGinley and Egan v United Kingdom 27 EHRR 1, paragraph 99.
c. The complainants in McGinley, who had been stationed on or near Christmas Island at the time of nuclear tests there in 1958, sought access to documents in the Government's possession relating to the tests. The ECtHR held that in these circumstances there was a positive obligation under Article 8 to disclose the documents:
i. "Where a Government engages in hazardous activities, such as those in issue in the present case, which might have hidden adverse consequences on the health of those involved in such activities, respect for private and family life under Article 8 requires that an effective and accessible procedure be established which enables such persons to seek all relevant and appropriate information." (101)
i. "that the mere mention of the pollution risks inherent in the production of steel from scrap iron is not enough to justify the applicants' assertion that they are the victims of a violation of the Convention. They must be able to assert, arguably and in a detailed manner, that for lack of adequate precautions taken by the authorities the degree of probability of the occurrence of damage is such that it can be considered to constitute a violation, on condition that the consequences of the act complained of are not too remote."
b. The Court rejected the application as inadmissible.
i. "97. At the same time, the Court reiterates the fundamentally subsidiary role of the Convention. The national authorities have direct democratic legitimation and are, as the Court has held on many occasions, in principle better placed than an international court to evaluate local needs and conditions. In matters of general policy, on which opinions within a democratic society may reasonably differ widely, the role of the domestic policy maker should be given special weight.
98. Article 8 may apply in environmental cases whether the pollution is directly caused by the State or whether State responsibility arises from the failure properly to regulate private industry. Whether the case is analysed in terms of a positive duty on the State to take reasonable and appropriate measures to secure the applicants' rights under para.1 of Art.8 or in terms of an interference by a public authority to be justified in accordance with para.2, the applicable principles are broadly similar. In both contexts regard must be had to the fair balance that has to be struck between the competing interests of the individual and of the community as a whole; and in both contexts the State enjoys a certain margin of appreciation in determining the steps to be taken to ensure compliance with the Convention. Furthermore, even in relation to the positive obligations flowing from the first paragraph of Art.8, in striking the required balance the aims mentioned in the second paragraph may be of a certain relevance.
99. The Court considers that in a case such as the present, involving State decisions affecting environmental issues, there are two aspects to the inquiry which may be carried out by the Court. First, the Court may assess the substantive merits of the Government's decision, to ensure that it is compatible with Art.8. Secondly, it may scrutinise the decision-making process to ensure that due weight has been accorded to the interests of the individual.
100. In relation to the substantive aspect, the Court has held that the State must be allowed a wide margin of appreciation. In Powell and Rayner, for example, it asserted that it was "certainly not for the Commission or the Court to substitute for the assessment of the national authorities any other assessment of what might be the best policy in this difficult social and technical sphere", namely the regulation of excessive aircraft noise and the means of redress to be provided to the individual within the domestic legal system. The Court continued that "this is an area where the Contracting States are to be recognised as enjoying a wide margin of appreciation"."
Note 1 References are to the relevant paragraph numbers in the document. [Back]