France said Tuesday it would call for Europe-wide controls on a paper
product containing bisphenol A after a watchdog agency said the widely-used
chemical may expose unborn children to breast cancer later in life.
Bisphenol A, or BPA, is a common component of plastic bottles and the
linings of food cans, but some studies have linked it to brain and nervous
system problems, reproductive disorders and obesity.
It has been banned for use in baby bottles by the European Union,
United States and Canada.
France's ANSES food safety agency urged pregnant women to avoid food
preserved in lined cans, or drinking water from polycarbonate water fountains
found in many office buildings which it said was a "source of exposure to
bisphenol A".
It also advised them to avoid handling slips from shop tills, and urged
further research into the risk of exposure for cashiers.
The agency said bisphenol A could pose health risks to unborn children
if their mothers ingested, inhaled or repeatedly touched products that contain
it - including thermal paper used in some kinds of cash register slips or ATM
receipts.
Bisphenol is also commonly found on CDs and DVDs and plastic containers
used for microwave cooking or fridge storage.
Ecology and Energy Minister Delphine Batho said that on the basis of
the ANSES report, France would recommend that the European Commission ban the
use of bisphenol A in thermal paper receipts.
"Until then, it is imperative that manufacturers prioritise the
search for a substitute for this substance," she said in a statement.
In a report summarizing several global scientific studies on the topic
up to July 2012, ANSES said its experts were "moderately" confident
of the evidence pointing to a risk to babies in the womb, though the danger for
other people remained unclear.
"The conclusions show that certain exposure of pregnant women to
BPA poses a risk for the mammary glands of the unborn child," the agency
said in a report that wrapped up a three-year investigation.
The risk "may be characterized... by increased sensitivity of the
mammary gland to the formation of tumours. The risk potentially concerns both
sexes," said the report.
There was also a possible risk for the foetus' brain, metabolism and
reproductive system, it added.
ANSES stressed there were still many uncertainties in the data.
Advised by agencies like ANSES, the French parliament in December voted
to ban BPA in baby food packaging from 2013 and in all food containers from
2015.
The chemical is still used around the world in plastic products, and
the United States said last year it would not impose a general ban of BPA as
there was no evidence of harm to adults.
In February, a report on an analysis of 150 scientific studies said
bisphenol A may be used in quantities too small to affect human health.
ANSES cautioned against replacing bisphenol A with a substitute from
the same chemical family, saying not enough was known about other bisphenols
like M, S, B, AP, AF, F and BADGE.
"These substances share a chemical structure," the agency
pointed out.
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