Modular Solution for Cosmetics Compliance
Check the Conformity of your Formulas
Secure your regulatory documents for each zone
Optimize on-site risk management
Manage your Safety Data Sheets efficiently
Automate your regulatory monitoring
Ensure the traceability of your substances
Maintain good HSE risk management
The UK Health and Safety Executive initiates the first post-Brexit update of the UK REACH Candidate List with a consultation on 15 proposed SVHCs.
Recevez une fois par mois les dernières actus réglementaires et conseils d’experts.
The China NMPA has updated the list of existing cosmetic ingredients, impacting foreign exporters. New regulations require approval for ingredients not on the list. The 1st of May also marked the end of animal testing for general cosmetics in China.
Learn about the upcoming approval of active chlorine and what it means for disinfectant products. Find out how to submit a Marketing Authorisation Application before the approval date to continue marketing these products legally. Join a consortium to reduce costs and save time on testing.
The deadline for transferring registrations from the UK to the EU has passed, with over 8,000 successfully transferred. Registrants have 3-12 months to update safety and administrative information to maintain compliance with REACH regulations. Learn more about REACH and upcoming deadlines.
ECHA identified 290 substances for potential regulatory risk management in their 2020 assessments. Member States are urged to take action promptly. ECHA's regulatory strategy aims to clarify high priority substances by 2027. Effective compliance checks are a priority.
The European Commission plans to revise the Cosmetics Regulation 1223/2009 to align with its new chemicals strategy, incorporating environmental considerations for the first time. Proposed changes include bans on certain toxic chemicals and a revision of nanomaterial definitions, raising industry concerns about ingredient restrictions and innovation limits.
The European Commission's Chemicals Strategy may lead to a reopening of the REACH regulation. The focus is on "one substance, one assessment" to improve efficiency and collaboration between agencies. The strategy is part of the European Green Deal, but concerns have been raised by NGOs and the chemical industry.