REACH testing is the abbreviation of the EU regulation REGULATION CONCERNING THE REGISTRATION, EVALUATION, AUTHORIZATION AND RESTRICTION OF CHEMICALS. It is a chemical regulatory system established by the EU and implemented on June 1, 2007.
This is a regulatory proposal involving the production, trade and use safety of chemicals. The purpose of the regulation is to protect human health and environmental safety, maintain and improve the competitiveness of the European Union chemical industry, as well as the innovative ability to develop non-toxic and harmless compounds, prevent market fragmentation, increase the transparency of the use of chemicals, promote non-animal experiments, and pursue social sustainable development. REACH has established the idea that society should not introduce new materials, products or technologies if their potential hazards are uncertain.
REACH is a European regulation on the registration, evaluation, licensing and restriction of chemicals.
REACH test regulation
REACH is the abbreviation of the EU regulation REGULATION CONCERNING the Registration, Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals. It is a chemical regulatory system established by the EU and implemented on June 1, 2007.
This is a regulatory proposal involving the production, trade and use safety of chemicals. The purpose of the regulation is to protect human health and environmental safety, maintain and improve the competitiveness of the European Union chemical industry, as well as the innovative ability to develop non-toxic and harmless compounds, prevent market fragmentation, increase the transparency of the use of chemicals, promote non-animal experiments, and pursue social sustainable development. The REACH directive requires that chemicals imported and produced in Europe must go through a set of comprehensive procedures such as registration, evaluation, authorization and restriction, so as to better and more easily identify the chemical components to ensure the environmental and human safety. The directive mainly includes registration, evaluation, authorization, restriction and other major items. Any commodity must have a registration file listing the chemical components, and explain how the manufacturer uses these chemical components and toxicity evaluation report. All information will be entered into a database under construction, which is managed by the European Chemical Agency, a new EU agency located in Helsinki, Finland. The agency will evaluate each file, and if chemicals are found to have an impact on human health or the environment, they may take more stringent measures. According to the evaluation results of several factors, the chemicals may be banned or need to be approved before use. It is reported that, unlike the RoHS Directive, REACH covers a much wider range. In fact, it will affect products and manufacturing processes in almost all industries, from mining to textile and clothing, light industry, electromechanical and other industries. REACH requires manufacturers to register about 30000 chemical ingredients in their products -- and measure their potential hazards to public health. REACH has established the idea that society should not introduce new materials, products or technologies if their potential hazards are uncertain.