REACh Regulations
REACh Regulations
REACh Regulations
Questions and Answers on the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) and the
REACH Regulation
1. ECHA1
2. REACH4
3. Help for companies and further information7
1. ECHA
ECHA is the new European Chemicals Agency based in Helsinki. It will mark
its start-up with the launch of its website on 1 June 2007, the day of entry
into force of the REACH Regulation, and will become fully operational by 1
June 2008.
1.1. What will ECHA do?
ECHA will manage and coordinate the registration, evaluation, authorisation
and restriction processes of chemical substances under the REACH
Regulation to ensure consistency in the management of chemicals across the
European Union. The Agency will provide Member States and EU institutions
with scientific and technical advice on chemicals covered by the Regulation.
The Agency's website will provide industry with guidance and tools and the
public with a range of information on registered chemicals.
1.2. What is ECHA's role with regard to other EU bodies?
As a regulatory Agency, ECHA, will be independent from other European
Union bodies. It will be managed autonomously and have its own staff with
the full legal capacity to act in its own name.
It will be linked to other EU Institutions, through the members of the
Management Board. The European Union will exercise financial control over
the Agency and EU Staff Regulations will apply.
1.3. What is the organisational structure of the Agency and the role
of its various parts?
Body
Role
Starts
Executive Director The legal representative of the
Nomination
Agency, responsible for the day-toforeseen in
day management and administration, autumn 2007
including responsibility over its
finances. The Executive Director will
report to the Management Board.
Management
Governing body of the Agency
First meeting on
Board
responsible for nominations, adopting 27-29 June 2007
the financial planning, budget work
programme, annual reporting &
strategic documents.
Secretariat
Supports the Committees and Forum, From summer
consisting of
and undertakes work on registration 2007
various
Directorates
Member State
Committee
Risk Assessment
Committee
Committee for
Socio-economic
Analysis
Forum
Board of Appeal
From 2008
From 2008
From 2008
From 2008
When the
1st appeal is
submitted
Previously all chemicals put on the market before 1981 were called "existing"
chemicals while chemicals introduced after 1981 were termed "new"
chemicals. New chemicals had to be tested quite rigorously under the
legislative provisions which are repealed by REACH. There were no such
provisions for ''existing'' substances. As a result knowledge on properties and
uses of existing substances is rather limited.
Under REACH, the burden of proof for demonstrating the safe use of
chemicals will be transferred from Member States to industry.
2.2. How does REACH work?
Companies that manufacture or import one tonne or more of a chemical
substance annually will be required to register it in a central database at the
European Chemicals Agency.
The registration procedure involves submitting a technical dossier
containing information on the substance and guidance how to handle it
safely. For quantities of 10 tonnes and more companies also need to submit a
Chemical Safety Report to document a safety assessment of the substance
demonstrating safe handling for all identified uses and manufacturing.
Evaluation allows regulatory authorities to determine if further testing is
needed and to assess whether information provided by industry complies
with the requirements (dossier evaluation). Substances suspected to pose a
risk to health or the environment will be selected for substance evaluation.
This may lead to the actions under the restrictions or authorisation
procedures.
Substances of very high concern are subject to an authorisation procedure.
Companies who apply for authorisation need to show that the risks posed by
those substances are adequately controlled or that the socio-economic
benefits from their use outweigh the risks. The aim is to give industry the
incentive to progressively substitute these substances with safer alternatives
when technically and economically feasible.
Substances of very high concern are:
carcinogens, mutagens or toxic to the reproductive system, categories
1 and 2
substances which are persistent, bio-accumulative and toxic
very persistent and very bio-accumulative
or of equivalent concern
Member States and the Agency, on a request from the Commission, can
place substances on a candidate list of substances of very high concern. The
first list will be available on the Agency's website from late 2008. Some 1500
substances may fall to be considered.
Restrictions are the safety net of the system. Any substance on its own, in
Regulation (1907/2006/EC)
Guidance documents (will be available for all main topics on the ECHA
website)
The ECHA website is a single point of entry for information on REACH
helpdesks in Member States
STEP 3. Identify the companys obligations under REACH
Create an inventory of substances (on their own, in preparations and
those intentionally released from products)
Consider exemptions for substances and uses in the inventory
Compile data based on volumes ( 1 tonne 10 tonnes, 100
tonnes & 1000 tonnes
Understand the sources of the substances (EU or non-EU supplier)
Determine the obligation with regard to each substance (manufacturer,
importer or downstream user)
3.3. Is there more information available?
European Chemicals Agency: http://echa.europa.eu
European Commission:
http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/reach/index_en.htm
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/chemicals/reach/reach_intro.htm
http://ecb.jrc.it/REACH/