CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY - Environmental group EcoWaste Coalition urged the government to implement measures that will protect the public, particularly cashiers, from being exposed to toxic chemicals lurking in thermal paper receipts.
EcoWaste Coalition president Eileen Sison and the Interfacing Development Interventions for Sustainability (IDIS) executive director Mark Peñalver have notified Trade Secretary Alfredo Pascual and Undersecretary Ruth Castelo about the hidden hazards posed by such transaction receipts and the need for governmental interventions.
According to the results of a pioneering study by the groups, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) such as Bisphenol A (BPA) and Bisphenol S (BPS) have been detected in thermal paper receipts collected from business and government establishments in the country. EDCs are non-natural chemicals or mixtures of chemicals that interfere with the way the body's hormones work, causing adverse health effects.
The study was undertaken as part of the recently-completed eight-country
EDC-Free Asia Project spearheaded by the Wonjin Institute for Occupational and
Environmental Health with support from the Korea Financial Industry Public
Interest Foundation.
Laboratory tests performed by WIOEH show that 32 of the 53 analyzed
samples from the Philippines (60%) had BPA and 13 (25%) had
BPS. The concentration range of BPA for the samples collected
from Davao, Makati, Manila, Quezon and Taguig Cities was 0.92 to 1.86%, way
above the European Union’s limit of 0.02%. The concentration range for
BPS was 0.61 to 1.12%.
“Mindful of the adverse effects of EDCs like BPA and BPS on human
health and the environment and the need to protect the vulnerable populations,
including cashier attendants who are predominantly women, we urge DTI to take
the necessary steps,” said Peñalver.
The EcoWaste Coalition and IDIS
specifically suggested to DTI to:
a. Promulgate as soon as possible a policy phasing out the use
of thermal paper receipts containing BPA and BPS by national and
local government agencies, including government owned and controlled
corporations;
b. Lead an interagency and multi-stakeholder process that will draw
up a mandatory national regulation restricting BPA in
thermal paper like in the EU, as well as BPS like in Switzerland; and
c. Develop strategies and promote activities to reduce employee and
customer exposure to BPA and BPS via thermal paper receipts.
Because of its reprotoxic and endocrine disrupting qualities, the European
Union has taken action to limit BPA’s use to protect human health and the
environment. In 2017, BPA was added to the Registration,
Evaluation and Authorization of Chemicals Candidate (REACH) List for substances
of very high concern and in 2019 the European Chemicals Agency recommended its
inclusion in the REACH Authorization List
From
January 2020, thermal paper with 0.02% or more of BPA by weight
cannot be placed on the EU market. Switzerland in 2019 also banned the use of
both BPA and BPS in thermal paper in concentrations equal to or
greater than 0.02% effective June 2020.
The groups expressed concern about the plight of cashiers who touch and handle
thermal paper receipts on a daily basis as this may result in high BPA/BPS
exposure and cause negative health outcomes, especially for pregnant or nursing
women, and women of childbearing age.
To reduce cashiers’ exposure to BPA/BPS in thermal paper receipts, the EcoWaste
Coalition and IDIS have recommended the following precautionary measures:
1. Do not mark a thermal receipt using
your fingernails; use a pencil or pen.
2. Avoid touching the printed side of the receipt; hold it lightly from
the backside.
3. Avoid hand
to mouth contact when handling receipts.
4. Wash hands thoroughly during
breaks, after changing receipt rolls, and before eating.
5. Refrain from using alcohol-based hand
sanitizers before or after handing receipts.
6. Talk to the store management
about shifting to alternative paper receipts. (Mindanao Examiner)
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