Chemical Compliance
Intelligence & Solutions
Home / News / Details

ECHA Recommends More Transparency in the Trade of Hazardous Chemicals

The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), with the aim of improving the EU’s implementation of the Prior Informed Consent (PIC) Regulation, that governs the export and import of hazardous chemicals and pesticides, is making recommendations for changes to the legal text.

Helsinki, 25 October 2023 – ECHA's third report on the operation of the Prior Informed Consent (PIC) Regulation shows that the overall workload of implementing the regulation, despite a slight decrease of export notifications, has continued to increase due to the constant addition of new chemicals subject to PIC and the increase in substances subject to explicit consent from non-EU importing countries prior to export. 

The report finds that some of the new chemicals added to the regulation like substances containing benzene, the first "substance in substance", and neonicotinoids that harm bees, have triggered many notifications and challenging new types of exports. There is also an increase in requests from the public seeking data on trade of hazardous substances collected under the PIC Regulation. 

As a result of these findings, ECHA recommends that any future revision to the PIC Regulation should:

  • define what parts of the export notifications are public;

  • clarify what information about trade should be published in the annual EU-level reports; and

  • improve predictability and clarity of the regulation through amendments to the legal text and implementation practices.

Sharon McGuinness, ECHA’s Executive Director says: 

"Interest in exports of hazardous chemicals from the EU has significantly increased over recent years, which has put PIC import and export notifications data under a magnifying glass. The ongoing evaluation of the regulation offers a good opportunity to improve the impact and transparency of PIC. "

"Our triennial report proposes concrete ways on how to achieve this, for example by clarifying the legal text and adapting current practices. Our recommendations aim at a more transparent and effective implementation of the regulation which controls the trade of hazardous chemicals."

Background

The PIC Regulation governs the export and import of certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides between the EU and non-EU countries. It places obligations mainly on companies that want to export these chemicals to non-EU countries.

Within the EU, the regulation implements the Rotterdam Convention on the prior informed procedure in international trade.

Further information


Source: European Chemicals Agency


For any article that states "Source: European Chemicals Agency" , ECHA accepts no responsibility and/or liability for any use made of the information, documents or data. 

Copyright: unless otherwise stated all contents of this website are ©2024 - REACH24H Consulting Group - All Rights Reserved - For permission to use any content on this site, please contact cleditor@chemlinked.com