Prague - Czech President Vaclav Klaus on Monday vetoed a law
placing the country's chemical industry under tougher European Union
rules, calling it bureaucratic and bad for business.
'Neither we nor the whole EU needs such regulation,' Klaus said in
a statement. 'There is no reason to further toughen legislation in
this field. People are not endangered by chemicals.'
The bill, passed by parliament last month, implements an
EU directive that requires manufacturers and importers to register
chemicals with the new Helsinki-based European Chemicals Agency.
Klaus, a free-market proponent and longtime EU sceptic, says the
new system is too costly, depriving Europe's chemical industry of
competitiveness.
The law is 'an unprecedented step' that would place the Czech
chemical industry 'under the direct control of European bureaucrats,'
he said.
'It amounts to full subjugation of the whole chemical industry,'
Klaus said.
The 200-seat Czech parliament passed the law on July 18. At least
101 votes are needed to override Klaus' veto.
The new EU agency's tasks are to collect information and run a
public database on chemicals as well as to evaluate, authorize and
restrict use of substances, so they pose no hazard to humans and the
environment.
The European Parliament approved the regulation in 2006. It
entered into force in 2007.
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