One of the lesser-known provisions of the sprawling REACH law is the right of consumers to demand information on the chemical content of products they purchase. The Ecologist reports today that two major European retail chains are failing to meet these obligations.
Titles IV and V of the law require that sellers of products containing chemicals listed as substances of very high concern (SVHC) notify their customers of this (customers could be downstream producers utilizing a chemical in their own product, as well as retail consumers). Generally, the threshold for notification is the presence of an SVHC in a concentration of 0.1 percent. The reporting obligation can be triggered by the addition of a substance to the SVHC candidate list, which currently contains several dozen chemicals but is expected to grow exponentially in coming years.
Reporting duties can also be triggered by a customer request for such information. In this case, at least the name of the chemical and information allowing the safe use of the product must be provided to the customer within 45 days. In a recent investigation by the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), that NGO sent 158 information requests to 60 retailers and vendors in the EU. EEB contends that 50 percent of the requests were not answered at all, while 75 percent received legally insufficient responses. EEB goes on to recommend that companies selling into Europe establish electronic chemicals management systems, utilize third-party testing, and deliver certification manifests through the supply chain.
Titles IV and V of the law require that sellers of products containing chemicals listed as substances of very high concern (SVHC) notify their customers of this (customers could be downstream producers utilizing a chemical in their own product, as well as retail consumers). Generally, the threshold for notification is the presence of an SVHC in a concentration of 0.1 percent. The reporting obligation can be triggered by the addition of a substance to the SVHC candidate list, which currently contains several dozen chemicals but is expected to grow exponentially in coming years.
Reporting duties can also be triggered by a customer request for such information. In this case, at least the name of the chemical and information allowing the safe use of the product must be provided to the customer within 45 days. In a recent investigation by the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), that NGO sent 158 information requests to 60 retailers and vendors in the EU. EEB contends that 50 percent of the requests were not answered at all, while 75 percent received legally insufficient responses. EEB goes on to recommend that companies selling into Europe establish electronic chemicals management systems, utilize third-party testing, and deliver certification manifests through the supply chain.
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