And you're not even living in EU... those fuckturd want to even ban lead ammunition. (To be replaced by much more dangerous steel one)
The British army were considering banning lead 20 years ago due to it beeing "hazedous to health" Like it made much difference to you when travelling through you at supersonic speeds.
Actually the concern in that regard is lead dust on indoor ranges. Adequate ventilation is a sufficient solution, however.
As far as "health hazards" are concerned, the whole point of bullets is to be dangerous (if you couldn't use them to tear a hole through an animal from a distance, they would be kinda useless...), but arguably there is nothing to be gained by having a bullet continue to be dangerous for quite some length of time after it has been fired and has come to a stop.
Part of the concern about lead in indoor ranges is not just the projectiles, but the primers (the part of the cartridge that ignites the gunpowder when struck by the firing pin) - Lead Styphnate is a common priming composition, and you can probably figure out what happens to the lead when the priming composition burns...
(Mercury Fulminate used to be used for primers before lead styphnate was common, but it was replaced with lead styphnate mostly because of corrosion issues with firearm barrels rather than concerns about mercury exposure)
As far as outdoor shooting is concerned, there are also concerns about environmental lead contamination. Rain water picks up CO2 from the air forming (dilute) Carbonic Acid, which reacts with metallic lead to form Lead Carbonate (which is water soluble). In New Zealand, when hunting waterfowl, it is illegal to use lead shotgun pellets because waterfowl swallow small stones, about the size of shotgun pellets, and use these to grind up food inside their crop. In California, hunters have to use non-lead bullets because of concerns about scavengers like the California Condor ingesting lead fragments in the entrails etc left behind by hunters.
Quite recently our great illustrious leaders here in NZ banned steel shotgun pellets (and pretty much all other steel ammunition), but after a small farce, they had to go back and change the rules so that steel shotgun pellets were specifically exempted from the ban