HC Deb 03 December 1984 vol 69 cc59-61W
Mr. Norman Hogg

asked the Secretary of State for Employment if steps are taken to ensure that Her Majesty's inspectors of health and safety are aware of the trade names of dyes and colours in use in industry in Britain which have the known potential to cause cancer of the bladder in workers using such dyes and colours; and what is the total number and the chemical types of such dyes and colours.

Mr. Peter Bottomley

The Health and Safety Executive is not aware of any dyes or colours in use in industry in Britain that have a known proven potential to cause cancer of the bladder in workers using them, though suspicions have arisen from time to time about particular groups of dyes or individual dyes and it has not been possible positively to disprove the existence of a risk of bladder cancer among exposed workers.

In particular, suspicion has fallen on dyes produced from benzidine. In the past, these may have contained some free benzidine as an impurity, but the concentrations of this substance have now been reduced to very low levels. Following discussions by the Health and Safety Commission's advisory committee on toxic substances, the Health and Safety Executive issued a guidance note in 1982, "Benzidine-based Dyes — Health and Safety Precautions".

Mr. Norman Hogg

asked the Secretary of State for Employment what progress has been made towards ratification of the International Labour Conference occupational cancer convention, 1974 (No. 139), for the control of all cancer-causing substances at work; and what information he has as to which member states have already ratified the convention; and in which year this was accomplished in each case.

Mr. Peter Bottomley

In January 1984, following the consideration by the Health and Safety Commissioner's advisory committee on toxic substances of draft regulations together with a general approved code of practice and a supplementary code of practice produced by a working party on the control of carcinogens, ACTS recommended to the HSC that a draft consultative document should be published for comment. The consultative document was published for comment. The consultative document was published in August and the consultation period ends on 1 March, 1985.

Following the consultation period, I expect that some further work will be needed before the regulations can be put by the HSC to the Government for approval; once the new regulations have been approved I hope that the Government will be in a position to ratify IL convention No. 139.

The information about ratifications of the convention is shown in the table.

States Year in which ratification was registered
Afghanistan 1979
Argentina 1978
Denmark 1978
Ecuador 1975
Egypt 1982
Finland 1977
Federal Republic of Germany 1976
Guinea 1976
Guyana 1983
Hungary 1975
Iraq 1978

States Year in which ratification was registered
Italy 1981
Japan 1977
Nicaragua 1981
Norway 1977
Peru 1976
Sweden 1976
Switzerland 1976
Syrian Arab Republic 1979
Uruguay 1980
Venezuela 1983
Yugoslavia 1977

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