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House of Representatives Standing Committee on Agriculture, Resources, Fisheries and Forestry
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Chapter 2 Background
Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals Legislation Amendment Bill 2012
2.1
This chapter provides background information to the Agricultural and
Veterinary Chemicals Legislation Amendment Bill 2012 (“the Bill”). In
particular, it highlights:
- the National
Registration Scheme for Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals (NRS) used to
regulate agricultural and veterinary chemicals;
- the reform context
and development of the Bill; and
- a description of the
key provisions of the Bill.
2.2
Agricultural and veterinary chemicals encompass a vast array of chemicals
and products. Agricultural chemicals and products have a variety of uses
including the protection of crops from weeds, insects and pathogens; the
protection of buildings, parks, infrastructure and houses from pests; and the
protection of human and environmental health. [1] Veterinary chemicals and
medicines encompass vaccines, antibiotics, worm treatments, lice treatments,
vitamins and minerals and those used to protect livestock and domestic or
companion animals from a wide range of diseases and illnesses.[2]
2.3
The Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) is
a statutory agency charged with the ‘registration of all agricultural and
veterinary chemical products into the Australian marketplace’.[3]
The APVMA, formed in 1993, has oversight of the NRS, being the mechanism by
which such chemicals are registered.
2.4
The Bill seeks to amend various legislation oversighting the
agricultural and veterinary (AgVet) chemicals sector and in particular, makes a
range of changes to how AgVet chemicals are regulated and registered. The Bill
aims to amend the following Commonwealth Acts:
- Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals
(Administration) Act 1992;
- the Agricultural and Veterinary
Chemicals Act 1994;
- the Agricultural and Veterinary
Chemicals Code Act 1994; and
- the Agricultural and Veterinary Chemical
Products (Collection of Levy) Act 1994.
2.5
The Bill’s Explanatory Memorandum states that:
The Bill implements reforms to the approval, registration and
reconsideration of agvet chemicals to improve the efficiency and effectiveness
of the current regulatory arrangements and provide greater certainty to the
community that chemicals approved for use in Australia are safe. The Bill makes
it clear that the health and safety of human beings, animals and the
environment is the first priority of the regulatory system.[4]
The current National Registration Scheme
2.6
The NRS ‘is a partnership between the Commonwealth and the states and
territories, with a shared division of responsibilities’.[5]
2.7
The Explanatory Memorandum states that:
The Code Act contains as a schedule to it, the Agvet
Code. Under the NRS, the Agvet Code operates, together with the Agvet Code
of each participating territory (that is, each State and the Northern
Territory) to constitute a single national Agvet Code applying throughout
Australia.
The Agvet Code, among other things, contains the detailed
provisions allowing the APVMA to evaluate, approve or register and reconsider
active constituents and agricultural and veterinary chemical products, (and
their associated labels). The provisions also allow the APVMA to issue permits
and to licence the manufacture of chemical products. Other provisions in the
Agvet Code provide for controls to regulate the supply of chemical products;
and ensure compliance with and enforcement of the Agvet Code.[6]
Reform context and development of the Bill
2.8
This section will provide a brief history of the reports and consultations
that led to the present Bill. Independent reports highlighting the need for
reform were released beginning in 2006 and culminated in the development of the
current Bill. Commenting on the reforms, the Department of Agriculture,
Resources, Fisheries and Forestry’s submission to the inquiry stated:
The reforms have been informed by extensive stakeholder
consultation. Chemical industry groups, environmental organisations, primary
producer associations, Commonwealth, state and territory agencies were all
involved in discussions about the Bill.
Three rounds of public consultation were conducted on the
reforms and associated Bill. The first round of public consultation occurred
from mid November 2010 to early February 2011 about the policy discussion
paper, Better Regulation of Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals ...
Further public consultation with an exposure draft of the
legislation occurred from 15 November 2011 to 29 February 2012 ...
The Bill was revised and released again as a revised exposure
draft in September 2012. The revised Bill included amendments to address issues
raised during the previous round of consultation. [7]
2.9
In brief, the reports and consultations leading to the development to
the development of the Bill have been as follows:
- In 2006,
the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) released a Performance Audit on the
Regulation of Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines, making a number of
recommendations.
- In 2006,
the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) identified the need for regulatory
reform in the chemicals and plastics area.[8] It subsequently tasked
the Productivity Commission to study the area and identify potential reforms.
- In 2008,
the Productivity Commission presented its report into Chemicals and Plastics
Regulation. It proposed a governance framework to address a number of system
failures.
- These
outcomes were translated into a National Framework for Chemicals and Plastics
Regulatory Reform, from which a COAG-backed Standing Committee emerged.
- Following
this, the Australian Government released the Better Regulation of Agricultural
and Veterinary Chemicals policy discussion paper to inform the reform agenda.
- Several
draft Bills were issued and consulted upon. These consultations have formed the
basis of the Bill before the Committee.
- The
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) recently completed a consultation
on the regulations associated with the legislation. Their findings are yet to
be released.
2.10
Each of these major steps are discussed in further detail below. It
should also be noted that in addition to these reports and consultations, a
Regulation Impact Statement (RIS) was prepared to assist the Australian
Government’s consideration of the issues. [9] This is discussed later
in this report.
Australian National Audit Office report
2.11
In December 2006, the ANAO released an audit report into the regulation
of pesticides and veterinary medicines. Findings of the audit included that:
- key programs such as
those to monitor the quality of pesticides and veterinary
medicines, could have been better administered
- a greater
emphasis was required to be placed on the APVMA’s compliance program and in
completing chemical reviews
- the
APVMA was not meeting its obligation to finalise applications within statutory
timeframes.
2.12
Overall the ANAO’s audit found that the APVMA needed to address some key
issues relating to the NRS including reviewing arrangements for sourcing expert
scientific advice to inform decisions, and for using state and territory
agencies to complete compliance activities on its behalf. The ANAO also
suggested improved regulatory arrangements for the chemicals deemed to be low
risk.[10]
Productivity Commission Research Report
2.13
In July 2008, the Productivity Commission released its study into
Chemicals and Plastics Regulation.[11] The Commission was asked
to ‘undertake a research study examining the current arrangements for the
regulation of chemicals and plastics in Australia’.[12]
2.14
The Commission’s report found that chemicals regulation is generally
appended onto a range of state and territory legislation dealing with ‘public
health, workplace safety, transport safety, environment protection and national
security’.[13] The Commission found
that while these regimes are broadly effective, they are less effective in
managing environmental and national security risks.
2.15
The Commission proposed that a governance framework that addresses
failures at four levels be implemented to include:
- policy development
and regime oversight;
- assessment of
chemical hazards and risks;
- risk management
standards setting; and
- administration and
enforcement.
National Framework for Chemical and Plastics Regulatory Reform
2.16
Following the Productivity Commission’s report, COAG completed a
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for Chemicals and Plastics Regulatory Reform.[14]
The MoU established the COAG Standing Committee on Chemicals. The Committee’s
role was as follows:
- co-ordinate the
implementation of the new governance framework for the regulation of chemicals
and plastics;
- monitor the
timeliness, effectiveness and consistency of reforms of chemicals and plastics
regulation;
- provide advice and
make recommendations as appropriate to BRCWG [Business Regulation and
Competition Working Group], COAG and relevant ministerial councils on how
chemicals and plastics policy initiatives that have cross-portfolio or cross-jurisdictional
implications might be best progressed. Ministerial Councils would include:
- the
Australian Health Ministers’ Conference;
- the
Australian Transport Council;
- the
Environment Protection and Heritage Council;
- the
Primary Industries Ministerial Council;
- the
Workplace Relations Ministers’ Council; and
- ministers
concerned with the security aspects of chemicals;
- provide an ongoing
forum for assessing the consistency of chemicals-specific policy settings
across the relevant policy areas, including:
- public
health;
- workplace
health and safety;
- transport
safety;
- environment
protection; and
- national
security;
- oversee a coordinated
national approach to regulatory reform of chemicals and plastics and the
consistent application of chemical hazard and risk-assessment methodologies and
international standards such as the Globally Harmonised System of
Classification and Labelling of Chemicals; and
- support the
coordinated development of regulatory proposals that have cross- portfolio or
cross-jurisdictional implications, including input into regulatory impact
assessments.[15]
Better Regulation of Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals policy
discussion paper
2.17
In November 2010 the Australian Government released the Better
Regulation of Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals policy discussion paper.[16]
The discussion paper proposed a set of reforms to ‘increase
the efficiency and effectiveness of the APVMA and to enable more effective
regulation of agricultural and veterinary chemicals’. The reforms were
framed around the following objectives:
- protection
of human health and the environment;
- alignment
of regulatory effort with the degree of risk;
- enabling
timely assessments, registrations and reviews;
- addressing
gaps in the current regulatory system;
- improving
the governance frameworks and operational activities of the APVMA and its
regulatory partners;
- improving
communication with agvet chemical stakeholders; and
- ensuring
the AVPMA’s financial viability for the future.[17]
Ongoing regulatory consultations
2.18
Concurrently, DAFF opened consultations on the proposed regulations to
accompany the Bill. The proposed regulations include amendments to the:
- Agricultural and
Veterinary Chemicals Code Regulations 1995 (Code Regulations)
- Agricultural and
Veterinary Chemicals (Administration) Regulations 1995 (Admin Regulations)
- Agricultural and
Veterinary Chemical Products (Collection of Levy) Regulations 1995 (Levy Regulations)
2.19
The consultation document for the proposed regulations notes that:
The details of the proposed regulations include amendments
to:
2.20
This consultation closed on 21 December 2012 and DAFF is in the process
of issuing revised regulations based on these consultations.[19]
Key Bill provisions
Schedule 1
2.21
Schedule 1 considers the issues of approvals, registrations, permits and
licences. The Schedule amends the Agricultural
and Veterinary Chemicals Code Act 1994. The explanatory memorandum
provides:
Simplification, reorganisation and
modernisation of the Agvet Code
The Bill simplifies, reorganises and modernises the Agvet
Code to reduce uncertainty and complexity in the legislation, and improve the
operation and understanding of the legislation. The Bill also includes other
amendments to remove redundant provisions and amend out of date provisions in
all Commonwealth agricultural and veterinary chemical legislation …
Enhanced consistency and
transparency of assessments
The Bill includes amendments that improve the efficiency and
effectiveness of agvet chemical regulation through increased transparency and
predictability of decision-making. The amendments provide for the APVMA to
make, publish and have regard to guidelines. These are to form part of an
overarching risk-based compendium that would be developed, maintained and
published by the APVMA. The compendium will improve transparency by detailing
all relevant guidelines, standards and methods which would guide regulatory
decisions.
The compendium assists in communicating the APVMA’s
acceptable level of risk and regulatory posture in regulating agricultural and
veterinary chemicals. The compendium also allows the APVMA and its regulatory
partners to determine the scale of an assessment appropriate to the decision by
better matching regulatory effort to risk. Providing a comprehensive reference
to the risk assessment process improves the predictability of regulatory
decisions, and therefore increases certainty and consistency for applicants and
the community …
Improving assessment efficiency
and effectiveness
The Bill also includes amendments to address concerns about
the time taken by the APVMA to complete applications and reconsiderations. The
current assessment timeframes do not take into account the total time elapsed
for considering an application or finalising a reconsideration (known as
chemical review). This does not provide for certainty and predictability in
assessment timeframes for applicants or the APVMA. In addition, applicants may
provide data for the APVMA’s consideration at any time. These existing
arrangements unnecessarily frustrate the finalisation of assessments for
applications and reconsiderations.
The amendments require the APVMA to refuse inferior or
deficient applications so that it only needs to assess applications that are of
the required standard. The reforms also introduce timeframes for assessments
that include the total time elapsed, including the time taken to provide more
information. This increases certainty around when applications will be
finalised.
The reforms introduce timeframes for reconsiderations (also
known to the community as chemical reviews). Along with other reforms to
reconsiderations, this assists in reducing the current backlog and provides for
consistent and more predictable completion of assessments within appropriate
timeframes.
The reforms would ensure that there is no undue impediment to
the use of overseas data and assessments by the APVMA, where conducted by
comparable agencies and while recognising differences in national approaches.
The reforms enable the APVMA to require electronic communication between it and
applicants. This electronic communication would also streamline the APVMA’s
internal administrative processes.[20]
Schedule 2
2.22
Schedule 2 considers re-approvals and re-registrations. The Schedule amends
the Agricultural
and Veterinary Chemicals Code Act 1994. The explanatory memorandum of the Bill
provides:
Australia currently has no requirement for existing
agricultural and veterinary chemicals to be regularly reviewed. Australia has
an ad hoc reconsideration system whereby chemicals of concern are brought to
the regulator’s attention by the community, by industry itself or on the
regulator’s own initiative. This existing approach is not consistent with
international best practice.
Consistent with international practice and coupled with
Commonwealth funding to mitigate start-up costs, the Bill provides for a
mandatory scheme for re-approval and re-registration. Re-approval and
re-registration will increase the scrutiny of chemical constituents and products
through a scheme that minimises impacts on industry. The scheme provides a
greater level of assurance that existing chemicals and products do not pose an
undue risk to human health or the environment, and further promotes public
confidence in agvet chemical regulation.[21]
Schedule 3
2.23
Schedule 3 considers issues of enforcement. The Schedule amends the Agricultural and Veterinary
Chemical Products (Collection of Levy) Act 1994, Agricultural and Veterinary Chemicals
(Administration) Act 1992 and Agricultural
and Veterinary Chemicals Code Act 1994. The explanatory memorandum to the
Bill provides:
The APVMA currently lacks a modern graduated compliance
regime. The current legislation provides no intermediate measures between the
extremes of warning letters and criminal prosecution. In addition, some
provisions limit the APVMA’s ability to respond when new information becomes
available during the course of an investigation.
The APVMA currently lacks a modern graduated compliance
regime. The current legislation provides no intermediate measures between the
extremes of warning letters and criminal prosecution. In addition, some
provisions limit the APVMA’s ability to respond when new information becomes
available during the course of an investigation.[22]
2.24
The Bill creates a range of new offence provisions, addresses previous
inconsistencies and provides for existing offence provisions to also be civil
penalty provisions. The Bill will give the APVMA the power to:
The Bill includes a number of new offence provisions. The new
offences either align with existing or previous offences or are consistent with
the A Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offence, Infringement Notices and
Enforcement Powers (published by the Attorney-General’s Department).[23]
2.25
The Bill also:
- Increases penalties
in some circumstances ‘to ensure that the penalty remains proportionate to the
potential gain from non-compliance and to align with the penalties for other
similar offences’[24]
- Inserts a new
Division that ‘provides for the more efficient collation of information to
provide a response that is complete and allows persons to consider their rights
and obligations and seek appropriate legal advice before providing information,
documents or answers to questions’.[25]
- Allows the AVPMA to ‘to
suspend or cancel, respectively, a registration or a permit where it considers
this is necessary to prevent imminent risk to persons of death, serious injury
or serious illness. The APVMA may exercise this authority whether or not the
product is being used in accordance with its instructions for use or conditions
of the permit’[26]
- Provides powers for
persons assisting APVMA inspectors
- Allows to APVMA to ‘apply
to a court to have a person pay certain costs incurred in investigation of the
offence or civil penalty provision’[27]
- Amends matters
pertaining to infringement notices.
Schedule 4
2.26
Schedule 4
considers data protection. The Schedule amends the Agricultural and Veterinary
Chemicals Code Act 1994. The explanatory memorandum to the Bill provides:
Data protection is a common feature of agricultural and
veterinary chemical regulation in countries that have comparable regulatory
systems to Australia. As investment in regulatory data can require significant
resources and because the time taken to collect such data and have it assessed
by the regulator diminishes its value, the protection of these data encourages
innovation in agricultural and veterinary chemicals. In the case of new
chemical products this means that the APVMA cannot rely on data it holds to
register a product without the data owner’s permission and before the
protection period has elapsed.
The current data protection provisions are overly complex and
do not provide meaningful access to data protection for information provided to
a reconsideration. By enhancing data protection provisions, the Bill removes
disincentives to invest in innovative product development and to improve the
productivity of Australia’s agri-food industries.
The Bill includes amendments to improve data protection
provisions by making them simpler and more consistent, and therefore easier for
industry and the APVMA to interpret and for the APVMA to administer. The
reforms also reduce the disincentives to generating and providing data by
extending data protection eligibility to a greater range of data. In the case
of reconsiderations, some amendments have been made to improve the system whereby
the data owners and other registrants can share the costs of any data required.
The Bill includes amendments to improve the mechanism by
which data owners can obtain compensation for information submitted in relation
to a reconsideration. These reforms would more closely align the data
protection for new products and reconsiderations, and reduce the disincentive
to providing data as part of these reconsiderations.[28]
Schedule 5
2.27
Schedule 5
considers arrangements for collection of the relevant levy. The Schedule
amends the Agricultural
and Veterinary Chemical Products (Collection of Levy) Act 1994. The explanatory
memorandum to the Bill provides that:
The Bill amends the current levy collection provisions to
allow alternative arrangements to be implemented. The APVMA is one of a number
of Australian Government regulators funded by fees, charges and levies imposed
on the industry it regulates. Chemical companies pay fees for the APVMA to, for
example, evaluate product registration proposals and pay a levy based on the
value of wholesale sales of chemical products.
Amendments in the Bill provide for any Commonwealth agency to
be able to issue notices regarding levy assessments and receive levy payments,
should it be cost effective to do so. Such a change would allow the government
to respond to perceptions of a conflict of interest arising from the current
arrangements for collection of this levy. No change to the levy structure or
rate is proposed by the Bill.
Schedule 6
2.28
Schedule 6 considers miscellaneous amendments. The Schedule amends the Agricultural and Veterinary
Chemicals Act 1994. The explanatory memorandum to the Bill provides that the
Bill:
updates the Agvet Act and the Code Act to specifically
provide for legislative instruments made under the Agvet Act or the Code Act,
including orders, to remain subject to disallowance with two exceptions …
includes provisions that deal with transitional, application
and savings measures for amendments made by the Act. To ensure a comprehensive
transitional approach can be adopted the Bill provides for regulations to take
effect before they are registered and this may have some retrospective
application of certain measures. A safeguard measure has been included to
ensure that a court must not convict a person of an offence, or order the
person to pay a pecuniary penalty, in relation to the conduct on the grounds
that the person contravened a provision because of a retrospective effect of
the regulations.[29]