Article contents
Shadow Zones: Transparency and Pesticides Regulation in the European Union
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2019
Abstract
In recent years, pesticides have captured the attention of both policymakers and the general public. A particular focus has been the transparency of the EU-level procedure for approving active substances, spurred by controversies surrounding the active substance glyphosate. Active substances are the ingredient in pesticides with the pesticidal effect. Once an active substance is approved at EU level, the pesticide containing that active substance must be authorised by each Member State. For this purpose, the EU's 2009 Plant Protection Product Regulation divides Member States into three zones—Northern, Central, and Southern—within which, zonal rapporteur Member States evaluate applications for authorisation. National authorisation decisions are based on these zonal evaluations. This novel system governing pesticides is under-researched. Furthermore, unlike active substance approval, the transparency of pesticide authorisation escapes public and policy scrutiny. Drawing on empirical research conducted for the European Parliament, this article evaluates the transparency of the zonal pesticide authorisation procedure. It thus contributes to the literature on transparency a detailed exploration of transparency in a highly complex, decentred, and polycentric risk regulation regime. While it finds that the zonal pesticide authorisation procedure, generally speaking, does not operate transparently, it argues further that levels of transparency within the regime as a whole may vary significantly depending on multiple different factors. It introduces the concept of ‘chiaroscuro regulation’ to characterise and understand these varying levels of transparency across different elements of the regime and considers some of its implications.
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Footnotes
I am grateful to Dr Steven Vaughan and Prof Cosmo Graham for their comments on earlier drafts of this article. I presented parts of this research at the 2018 LSA annual meeting in Toronto and the 2018 SLS annual conference in London. My thanks to the participants for their thoughts. I am also grateful to the editors and anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments. Any mistakes are my own.
References
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5 Discussed further in Part III.
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56 Arts 1, 10, 11(2) –(3) TEU; Art 15(1) TFEU.
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71 EPRS, EU Policy and Legislation on Pesticides: Plant protection products and biocides (EUR-OP, 2017), p 6.
72 For more information on benefits and drawbacks of pesticides, see ibid, pp 8–10 and Hamlyn, note 9 above, pp 3–6.
73 Bozzini, note 8 above, ch 3.
74 Directive (EEC) 91/414 [1991] OJ L230/1.
75 COM(2001) 444 final, Evaluation of the Active Substances of Plant Protection Products; SEC(2006) final, Report on the Impact Assessment for a Regulation Replacing Directive 91/414/EEC on Plant Protection Products, pp 10–18.
76 Bozzini, note 8 above, pp 61–65.
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78 COM(2001) 444 final, ‘Evaluation’, note 75 above, p 8.
79 SEC(2006) final, ‘Report on the Impact Assessment’, note 75 above, p 5.
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81 PPPR, Recs 12, 14, 25, 29. See also Art 75(3).
82 COM(2006) 388 final, ‘Proposal for a Regulation’, note 77 above, pp 9, 14.
83 See Parts III.B–IV.A.
84 FCEC, note 80 above, p 81.
85 European Parliament, ‘Report on the Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council Concerning the Placing of Plant Protection Products on the Market FINAL A6-0359/2007’, p 133.
86 Ibid, p 110.
87 Ibid, pp 16–17, 18–20, 47, 49, 50, 72–73, 77, 93, 99, 102, 108, 110–11; European Parliament, ‘Recommendation for Second Reading on the Council Common Position for Adopting a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Placing of Plant Protection Products on the Market A6-0444/2008’, pp 68–69, 73, 86, 88–89, 96–97.
88 COM(2006) 388 final, ‘Proposal for a Regulation’, note 77 above, p 7.
89 European Parliament, note 85 above, pp 15, 31–32, 72, 74, 78, 86, 132.
90 PPPR, Arts 7(1), 8(1)–(2), (4).
91 Ibid, Art 7(1).
92 PPPR, Art 10.
93 Ibid, Art 11(1)–(2) second paragraph.
94 Ibid, Art 12(1). The volume of public comments varies. A review of several recent applications for renewal of active substance approvals reveals that public comments are rare and rarer still in the case of applications for the approval of new active substances, if submitted at all. However, public comments on the application for renewal of approval of the highly controversial active substance glyphosate filled over 600 pages. Comments and responses are recorded in Peer Review Reports, at http://registerofquestions.efsa.europa.eu/roqFrontend/ListOfQuestionsNoLogin?1.
95 PPPR, Art 12(2) second paragraph.
96 Ibid, Art 13(1)–(2).
97 Ibid, Art 29(1)(a); see Part IV.A.
98 Ibid, Art 13(4).
99 ECORYS, Study supporting the REFIT Evaluation of the EU Legislation on Plant Protection Products and Pesticides Residues (Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009 and Regulation (EC) No 396/2005) (EUR-OP, 2018), pp 165, 167–68; V Storck, DG Karpouzas, and F Martin-Laurent, ‘Towards a Better Pesticide Policy for the European Union’ (2017) 575 Science of The Total Environment 1027, p 1030.
100 ECORYS, note 99 above, pp 165, 168–70.
102 SWD(2018) 37 final, The REFIT Evaluation of the General Food Law (Regulation (EC) No 178/2002).
103 ENVI Committee, ‘Draft Report on the Implementation of the Plant Protection Products Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009 (2017/2128(INI))’ (2018).
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105 SWD(2018) 37 final, note 102 above, pp 44–45.
106 ECI, note 104 above, p 2.
107 C(2017) 8414 final, Communication on the European Citizens’ Initiative ‘Ban Glyphosate and Protect People and the Environment from Toxic Pesticides’, pp 10–12.
108 COM(2018) 179 final, Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Transparency and Sustainability of the EU Risk Assessment in the Food Chain, pp 3, 8.
109 Ibid, pp 18, 19, 26–29.
110 Ibid, pp 40–42.
111 Ibid, pp 41–42.
112 See PPPR, Art 33(4); ibid.
113 PPPR, Rec 29, Art 3(17), Annex I.
114 Ibid, Rec 25.
115 Ibid, Rec 29.
116 Commission, Guidance Document on Zonal Evaluation and Mutual Recognition under Regulation (EC) No 1107/2009 SANCO/13169/2010 Rev. 9, p 5.
117 Ibid, p 9; Commission, Guidance Document on the Presentation and Evaluation of Dossiers According to Annex III of Directive 91/414/EEC in the Format of a (Draft) Registration Report SANCO/6895/2009 Rev 1.
118 PPPR, Art 33.
119 Commission, note 116 above, p 4.
120 Ibid, pp 7–8.
121 PPPR, Art 36(1) first paragraph.
122 Ibid, Art 36(1) second paragraph. See Part IV.B.
123 Regulation (EU) No 546/2011 [2011] OJ L155/127. The Uniform Principles establish a harmonised methodology and thresholds for assessing and determining the acceptability of risks posed by pesticides, SAM, EU Authorisation Processes of Plant Protection Products - from a Scientific Point of View Scientific Opinion 5/2018 (EUR-OP, 2018), p 50.
124 PPPR, Art 36(1) first and third paragraphs.
125 Ibid, Art 37(1).
126 Commission, note 116 above, p 13.
127 Ibid, pp 13–14.
128 Ibid, p 14.
129 PPPR, Art 36(2)–(3).
130 Ibid, Art 36(3) first and second paragraphs.
131 See Hamlyn, note 4 above, pp 53–79.
132 Ibid, pp 90–91.
133 Uniform Principles, note 123 above.
134 PPPR, Art 60(3).
135 Commission, note 116 above, p 14.
136 Ibid, p 13.
137 ANSES, Press Kit: New Missions for ANSES in the Area of Plant Protection Products, Fertilisers and Growing Media (2015), p 7.
138 Hamlyn, note 4 above, pp 91–93.
139 Ibid, p 92.
140 Directive (EC) 2003/4, note 41 above. For examples of Registration Reports, see BVL's (German CA) website, at https://www.bvl.bund.de/EN/04_PlantProtectionProducts/01_ppp_tasks/02_ppp_AuthorisationReviewActSub/02_ppp_RegistrationReports/psm_RegReports_node.html.
141 These exceptions relate to the adverse effects of disclosure on ‘international relationship, public security or national defence’; ‘the course of justice’ for example ensuring fair trials or criminal investigations; and ‘intellectual property rights’.
142 Bayer CropScience and Stichting De Bijenstichting v College voor de toelating van gewasbeschermingsmiddelen en biociden, C-442/14, EU:C:2016:890.
143 Directive (EC) 2003/4, note 41 above, Art 2(1)(b).
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149 Tweedale, note 148 above, para 91, Hautala, note 148 above, para 98, Stichting Greenpeace Nederland, note 144 above, para 80.
150 OECD, The Governance of Regulators’ Practices: Accountability, Transparency and Co-ordination (OECD, 2016), p 45.
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160 Ibid.
161 Ibid, p 94.
162 PPPR, Arts 4(2)–(3).
163 Ibid, Art 29(1).
164 Ibid, Art 29(6) second paragraph.
165 Storck, Karpouzas, and Martin-Laurent, note 99 above, p 1028; EFSA, ‘Conclusion on the Peer Review of the Pesticide Risk Assessment of the Active Substance Glyphosate’ (2015) 13(11) EFSA Journal 4302, p 11Google Scholar. See also Hautala, note 148 above.
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168 Schauer, note 67 above, p 1345.
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171 I am grateful to the editors/anonymous peer reviewer, for clarifying this point.
172 COM(2018) 179 final, note 108 above, p 3.
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175 Commission, note 116 above.
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184 See Part IV.A.3.
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187 See Part IV.A.3.
188 Hamlyn, note 4 above, p 93.
189 PAN-Europe, ‘Zonal authorisation’ (undated), at https://www.pan-europe.info/eu-legislation/zonal-authorisation.
190 ECORYS, note 99 above, p 170.
191 Fisher, note 17 above, p 306.
192 C Hood, ‘Beyond Exchanging First Principles? Some Closing Comments’ in Hood and Heald, note 11 above, p 219.
193 Jasanoff, note 48 above, p 22.
194 See Parts III.B, IV.A.2.
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198 Ibid, p 312.
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202 For example, Declaration No 17 on the right of access to information, annexed to the Final Act of the Treaty on European Union [1992] OJ C191/101; Vos, note 16 above, p 129; Lenaerts, note 199 above, pp 318–24.
203 Lenaerts, note 199 above, pp 319–20.
204 See Part IV.B.
205 C(2017) 8414 final, note 107 above, p 9.
206 European Parliament, note 85 above, p 110.
207 Ibid, pp 19–20.
208 SAM, note 123 above, p 33.
209 PPPR, Art 33.
210 Lee, note 63 above, p 78.
211 Abbot and Lee, note 195 above, p 10.
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217 As suggested by SAM, note 123 above, p 39.
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220 Tweedale, note 148 above; Hautala, note 148 above.
221 See Parts III.B, IV.A.2.
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