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欧洲简化部分化学品合规模式
Zhong Guo Hua Gong Bao·2025-09-23 09:41

Group 1 - The 17th Global Chemicals Regulation Annual Forum was held in Hangzhou, highlighting the challenges faced by the European chemical industry and the efforts to simplify compliance frameworks to improve efficiency and reduce unnecessary costs [1] - The Helsinki Chemicals Forum (HCF) Secretary General Geert Dancet emphasized that standardized and high-level chemical management has become a global consensus and trend, with governments and international organizations enhancing legislation and promoting technological innovation for a safer and more transparent sustainable chemical governance system [1][2] - The European Union (EU) is a key leader in global chemical governance, with the recent launch of the European Chemical Industry Action Plan (ECHA) addressing challenges such as industrial relocation, high energy costs, and overcapacity, focusing on enhancing industrial resilience, accelerating decarbonization, incentivizing innovation, and simplifying regulations [1][2] Group 2 - The ECHA plan includes a simplified review framework, as the EU chemical industry has seen a 50% decline in global market share over the past 20 years, with over 11 million tons of capacity lost due to the closure of more than 20 major production sites in the last two years [2] - European natural gas prices are four times higher than those in the US, and electricity prices are twice as high as in the US and China, contributing to significant cost pressures on the industry [2] - The ECHA plan outlines four main action areas: strengthening industrial resilience, ensuring energy supply while promoting decarbonization and circular economy, incentivizing green innovation and market mechanisms, and simplifying regulatory frameworks, aiming to reduce administrative burdens by 25% for large enterprises and 35% for SMEs [2] Group 3 - The EU Commission proposed to establish a basic regulation for the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) to enhance its governance capacity and financial sustainability, with targeted revisions to the REACH regulation expected by the end of 2025 to simplify and expedite regulatory processes [3] - Future proposals will focus on environmental legislation, agricultural biocontrol, and facilitating market access for biopesticides, with a commitment to make prudent decisions regarding PFAS restrictions based on scientific opinions and monitoring frameworks [3] - The plans are expected to undergo necessary evaluations by early 2027, potentially leading to revisions in the long-term strategy of the EU chemical industry, including an effectiveness assessment of simplified EU chemical regulations [3] Group 4 - The UK, closely linked to the EU, is also beginning to simplify regulatory measures by proposing the Alternative Transitional Registration model (ATRm), which aims to maintain high levels of protection for human and environmental health while minimizing additional compliance costs due to Brexit [4] - If compliance burdens are too high, some companies may opt not to register formally, potentially reducing the variety and quantity of chemicals in the UK market and impacting supply chains and global competitiveness [4] - The ATRm model is estimated to save 71% of compliance costs, valued at approximately £1.5 billion [4]