Precautionary
principle: Short definition
The precautionary principle plays an important role at
environmental policy and health policy in Europe. It has the task to prevent
damages on the environment or the human health in advance. In the 1970s, the
German government began employing a principle according to which a distinction
is to be made between human actions that cause danger and those that merely
cause risks. This principle, called the foresight principle, is the predecessor
model of the precautionary principle. In 1970s and early 1980s a more
formalised precautionary principle, as a justification for imposing restriction
on the use of technologies such as nuclear powers was promoted by academics and
pressure groups (J. Morris (2002)). Today the principle is both celebrated and
criticized. One of the biggest problem of the principle is, that it is not
clear defined how to use it and what it actually says (E. Persson (2016)).
Precautionary
principle: EU and US
The precautionary principle has generated
transatlantic controversy. While the European Union endorses the precautionary
principle and proactively regulates uncertain risks, the United States opposes
the precautionary principle and waits for evidence and harm before regulating.
Nevertheless, the European Union is not more precautionary than the US
absolutely. In some cases, like nuclear energy, particulate air pollution and
new drug approval the US is more precautionary while the European Union is more
precautionary in thing like GMOs and hormones in beef (J. Wiener et al.). This
implicates for scientists that it is not easy to keep the overview about the
precautionary principle and to know what things are allowed. In some cases, US
scientists have much more liberties than the EU scientists while in other cases
something for EU scientists is allowed and the US is more precautionary.
Pro and con of
the precautionary principle
Fundamentally, the precautionary principle is a good
and important thing for the protection of the environment and the human health.
I think it is a good idea that the legislation on GMOs in Europe is based on
this principle. Because in most cases, genetically modified organisms are not
essential for survival for us so it is not tragically when it takes more time until
a product is available for general public. In other sector, like pharmacy, it
can prevent important innovations. It often lasts years until you can prove
that something is harmless and there are so many rules and provisions in the
drug development. This implicates that drug development is a very expensive
thing and it is difficult to find investors so the precautionary principle in
this case is a barrier for new innovations.
The
precautionary principle: A threat to science?
The precautionary principle is both, a threat and a
chance, for science. It is a threat because it makes science more expensive and
complicated. Scientists have so many rules they must observe that they get
quenched by them. Maybe some new innovations got rejected just because it is
too expensive or even impossible to prove that they are harmless. On the other
hand, it is possible that they find new scientist knowledge during a
verification of a new innovation and the precautionary principle forces to
rethink an idea twice.
Literature:
Jonathan
B. Wiener, Michael D. Rogers. 2002. Comparing precaution in the United States and
Europe. Journal of Risk
Research (2002).
Erik Persson. 2016. What are the core ideas behind the Precautionary Principle?. Science
of the Total Environment (2016).
Julian Morris. 2002. The relationship between risk analysis end the precautionary principle.
Toxicology (2002).
Dear Tatjana
AntwortenLöschenI am impressed - really good work. You found good references and managed to use them to form your own opinion.
You write that 'Because in most cases, genetically modified organisms are not essential for survival for us so it is not tragically when it takes more time until a product is available for general public' this might be true - for us. But in other cases, GMOs could have helpe. By acting like GMOs are dangerous in Europe, a lot of African States have rejected GMO plants and food.see e.g. http://cip.cornell.edu/DPubS?service=UI&version=1.0&verb=Display&handle=dns.gfs/1200428165
Very good work!
Best wishes
Petra
Dear Tatjana,
AntwortenLöschenI think you did a very good literature research. Your definition of the precautionary principle is not only a definition but also gives us as reader background information.
Your examples are very well chosen and you mention very good that the precautionary principle is not only a threat but also a chance for science.
Best regards,
Alexia