Flame retardant chemicals: another furniture issue
Some years ago the Monitor reported that Congress mandated a National Academy of Sciences (NAS) study on the possible toxicity of flame retardant chemicals that might be used to treat upholstered furniture fabrics.
The NAS study concluded that most of the proposed chemicals could be used safely and reserved judgment on others pending more study.
Among such chemicals widely used today are the brominated flame-retardants. Today, those chemicals are under attack by environmental extremists such as the Environmental Working Group (EWG). The group recently released a new study in which it claims it has found high levels of flame retardant (FR) chemicals in mother's breast milk.
EWG claims theirs is the first nationwide test for the presence of the chemicals in humans. The FR chemicals are also used to help make computers, televisions, and other products flame resistant.
The National Association of State Fire Marshals (NASFM) once claimed that computer equipment was unsafe because the outer plastic housing of inkjet printers could be ignited by exposure to a small open flame such as a candle. The NASFM strongly advocated the use of flame-retardants in the composition of the housing to reduce flammability.
The Monitor covered the story at the time, noting that even then, environmentalists were working to ban the chemicals in Europe. (6)
In September, 2001, the European Parliament approved a European Commission proposal to ban penta-BDE, octa-BDE, and deca-BDE. The Parliament acted on the claim that the FR chemicals were hazardous to health. In 1999, a Swedish Government Commission issued a study that asserted that the brominated flame-retardants are "persistent, bio-accumulative, and toxic in the aquatic environment. They show effects above all on the liver but also on thyroid hormone and affect the behavior of mice. They occur widely in the environment, in human blood and in mother's milk." (7)
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