Enforced in 2009, the Regulation (EC) 1223/2009 aims to ensure a better safety of cosmetic products for consumers. It requires cosmetic brands to perform a thorough safety assessment for each product before placing it on the market. This regulation has had strong international impacts on the cosmetic industry, insofar as other countries such as Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, etc. are now enforcing laws that tend to go in the same direction.
Indeed, in Europe, when a cosmetic product is placed on the market, the Responsible Person must keep a Product Information File on it according to the Article 11. The product information file should contain:
The ban covers cosmetics and cosmetic ingredients produced in and imported into South Korea. Nonetheless, the law is only applicable to endpoints where the use of non-animal alternative tests has been accepted by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS). Moreover, some tests for cosmetics currently have no alternative tests, such as skin and eye irritation, skin sensitization, and repeated dose toxicity.
The National Assembly�s Health and Welfare Committee accepted the draft on the 26th of November, and is set to apply it starting 2018.
The Cruelty Free International (CFI) called it �excellent news� and added that South Korea is �joining the lengthening list of nations that no longer see animal experiments as worthwhile for cosmetics�.
However, Human Society International (HSI) said that all alternatives approved by the OECD must be quickly adopted by the MFDS, so that the new law effectively reduces the number of animal testing in cosmetics.
Feel free to contact EcoMundo�s experts by mail (contact@ecomundo.eu) or by phone (+1 514 803 9179).
Enforced in 2009, the Regulation (EC) 1223/2009 aims to ensure a better safety of cosmetic products for consumers. It requires cosmetic brands to perform a thorough safety assessment for each product before placing it on the market. This regulation has had strong international impacts on the cosmetic industry, insofar as other countries such as Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, etc. are now enforcing laws that tend to go in the same direction.
Indeed, in Europe, when a cosmetic product is placed on the market, the Responsible Person must keep a Product Information File on it according to the Article 11. The product information file should contain:
The ban covers cosmetics and cosmetic ingredients produced in and imported into South Korea. Nonetheless, the law is only applicable to endpoints where the use of non-animal alternative tests has been accepted by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS). Moreover, some tests for cosmetics currently have no alternative tests, such as skin and eye irritation, skin sensitization, and repeated dose toxicity.
The National Assembly�s Health and Welfare Committee accepted the draft on the 26th of November, and is set to apply it starting 2018.
The Cruelty Free International (CFI) called it �excellent news� and added that South Korea is �joining the lengthening list of nations that no longer see animal experiments as worthwhile for cosmetics�.
However, Human Society International (HSI) said that all alternatives approved by the OECD must be quickly adopted by the MFDS, so that the new law effectively reduces the number of animal testing in cosmetics.
Feel free to contact EcoMundo�s experts by mail (contact@ecomundo.eu) or by phone (+1 514 803 9179).