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
An overview of CEPA requirements for organizations operating in Canada. Learn key obligations, compliance responsibilities, and best practices across all sectors.
Recevez une fois par mois les dernières actus réglementaires et conseils d’experts.
Managing cosmetic compliance across multiple markets quickly becomes complex when relying on spreadsheets. This article examines the limits of manual data management and when a more structured approach becomes necessary.
Managing cosmetic regulatory data across the U.S., Canada, and Europe is no longer just a compliance issue. It is a data management challenge that directly impacts consistency, risk, and scalability for cosmetic brands.
In 2025, cosmetic, fragrance and home fragrance compliance has shifted to true global-by-design: brands must build products to meet EU, US, Canadian and emerging market (Taiwan, ASEAN, GCC) requirements from day one. EcoMundo’s blog explains this growing regulatory complexity—dermocosmetics, hair “skinification”, perfumes, digital tools & PLM—and shows how to secure ingredients, structure product files (PIF, DIP) and industrialize global compliance to stay competitive into 2026.
At the end of 2025, the Biocidal Products Committee failed to reach a consensus on the approval of ethanol as a biocidal active substance, pushing its opinion back to May 2026. This delay effectively extends the transitional period but leaves manufacturers and importers facing ongoing uncertainty when planning their product portfolios and authorisation strategies.
This section explains the latest EU developments on corporate sustainability reporting and due diligence: CSRD, CS3D, ESG obligations, value chain, liability and regulatory simplification. The goal is to help companies understand what is really changing for their governance, reporting and day-to-day practices.
The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) has recommended that the European Commission add four substances to the REACH Authorisation List to better protect human health and the environment. Once listed, companies will be required to apply for authorisation if they wish to continue using these substances.