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Precaution is simply common sense

POSTED BY aharris

Blogpost by Paul Johnston and David Santillo – May 24, 2012

Using precaution to avoid environmental problems makes sense right? Well, that is what is called the Precautionary Approach.

The Precautionary Approach gives the benefit of doubt to the environment. It basically reverses the burden of proof and says: “If you are in doubt about the consequences of what you intend to do, then don’t do it”.

In reality, precaution is simply the application of common sense to effective environmental regulations, allowing protective decisions to be made with greater confidence in the face of inevitable uncertainties and unknowns.

So why then would we want to take a different approach to regulating genetically modified organisms (GMO)? In fact, given how little is known of the effects of GMO on non-target species and the ecosystem as a whole, why would we not want to be still more cautious?

Precaution is precisely what it says – taking cautious action to prevent harm in advance rather than assuming and relying upon an ability to recall and remediate should harm occur. If the release of GMOs to the environment is not done with a precautionary approach, is it really precaution that’s the problem?

What is surprising is that such an approach is seen as unrealistic or utopian by many chemicals manufacturers, when in fact it is based upon the same strategies that we all use to navigate our way through the hazards of everyday life. Precaution underpins the way humans respond to hazards. In some cases these are subconscious decisions, in other cases we sidestep such hazards through conscious decision making.

The Precautionary Approach has increasingly found a place in the text of agreements aimed at environmental protection and has been much misrepresented and maligned ever since. From its origins in Germany in the 1980s, where it was applied to the protection of forests from acid rain, the relevance of the precautionary approach to other environmental problems surrounded by scientific uncertainty was quickly recognised.

This included pollution by one-time ‘wonder chemicals’, such as PCBs and many pesticides, for which the “benefit of the doubt” had routinely been given to the chemicals (and therefore their producers) rather than to the environment.

This led to pollution problems of global proportions because the lack of conclusive proof of harm had been sufficient to allow business as usual, despite the clear warnings available for many of the most hazardous chemicals.

Even now, with near universal bans on the worst of the worst chemicals, not only are we faced with the contaminating legacy of past mistakes, but new problems continue to emerge from chemicals put into widespread use without the drawbacks having been fully investigated by the companies that are marketing them.

The European Environment Agency, in its 2001 report: “Late Lessons from Early Warnings” (and in the follow-up volume due for publication this year) provides numerous case studies of where “permissive regulation” has failed the environment and action to prevent harm has come too late.

So let’s use some common sense and take a precautionary approach.

Paul Johnston and Dave Santillo, Greenpeace International Science Unit

For further reading:

The Precautionary Principle: Protecting against failures of scientific method and risk assessment

 

This entry was posted on Thursday, June 7th, 2012 at 3:15 pm and is filed under GM, Genetic Engineering, Sustainable Agriculture. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Precaution is simply common sense”

  1. Steve Says:

    As a precautionary measure, I draw your attention to the following paper by Hahn and Sunstein (University of Manchester and Harvard Law School respectively) published in the Economist’s Voice in 2005:

    “The Precautionary Principle as a Basis for Decision Making”,

    Abstract:

    Over the coming decades, the increasingly popular “precautionary principle” is likely to have a significant impact on policies all over the world. Applying this principle could lead to dramatic changes in decision making. Possible applications include climate change, genetically modified food, nuclear power, homeland security, new drug therapies, and even war.

    We argue that the precautionary principle does not help individuals or nations make difficult choices in a non-arbitrary way. Taken seriously, it can be paralyzing, providing no direction at all. In contrast, balancing costs against benefits can offer the foundation of a principled approach for making difficult decisions.

    http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=721122&http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com.au/

    Objective cost/benefit analyses makes more sense to me too, rather than ideologically driven fear mongering.

  2. Steven Earl Salmony Says:

    What we know thanks to well-established scientific knowledge about biological evolution as well as the finite and frangible physical world we are blessed to inhabit would lead sensible people, I suppose, to conclude that there is nothing or precious little that can be done to change the ‘trajectory’ of human civilization. So powerful is the force of evolution that we will “do what comes naturally” by continuing to overpopulate the planet and await the next phase of the evolutionary process. So colossal, reckless and relentless, too, is the unbridled expansion of the global political economy now overspreading the surface of Earth. Even so, still hope resides within that somehow humankind will make use of its singular intelligence and other unique attributes so as to escape the fate that appears ‘as if through a glass darkly’ in the offing, the seemingly certain fate evolution appears to have in store for us. Come what may. In the face of all the global ecological challenges that we can see now and here, I continue to believe and to hope that we find adequate ways of consciously, deliberately and effectively doing the right things, according the lights and the science we possess, the things that serve to confront and overcome the evolutionary trend which seems so irresistible. Perhaps others would comment on human agency, human population dynamics, endless economic growth and the potentially catastrophic consequences of the unrestricted overproduction, overconsumption and overpopulation activities of the human species on our watch.

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