Abstract

Some 88% of chemical suppliers are failing to tell European customers when their products contain substances of very high concern (SVHCs), according to a study by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), the body responsible for implementing chemical regulations in the European Union. The failure is a breach of the regulations, which classify SVHCs as present when at concentrations of more than 0.1% by weight. The same study found that SVHCs are present in 12% of consumer products such as footwear and electronic accessories. Chemicals classified as SVHCs have restricted uses. For the study, ECHA inspected 682 consumer products made by 405 companies across 15 European countries. SVHCs identified in the consumer goods include various phthalates, heavy metals, and short-chain chloroparaffins. ECHA says the problem can be solved if companies improve knowledge of their products and better communicate this information to customers. The agency plans to publish new guidance on communication

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