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What
was
'China REACH' 2003?
New Chemical
Substances
2003
Guidance
2004
China's initial REACH-like regulation for chemical substances was
known as PEANCS, short for Provisions on the Environmental
Administration of New Chemical Substances. Issued by the State
Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) of the Ministry of
Environmental Protection (MEP), it was administered by SEPA's Chemical Registration Center (CRC).
Effective beginning October 15, 2003,
it was replaced
on October 15, 2010.
Prior to manufacturing or importing a "new" chemical
substance,
the manufacturer or importer (whether domestic or foreign) must submit a
Notification and receive a Registration Certificate from the CRC. The
notification form includes a description of the chemical substance; uses of
the substance and the type of human/environmental exposure; the substance's
inherent characteristics; toxicological (human) test results;
eco-toxicological test results including testing in China with Chinese
testing organisms; recommendations for safe usage; and payment of a fee.
Notification and registration are at the substance level; chemical products
themselves are not registered. However, new chemical substances
in the following chemical products are covered: chemical
fertilizers, detergents, inks, paints, stabilizers, dyes, flavoring agents,
antioxidants, solvents, fillings, carriers, surface active agents,
plasticizers, preservatives, defoaming agents, dispersing agents,
antiprecipitants, drying agents, dehydrators, emulsifiers, anti-emulsifiers,
thickeners, acid/base neutralizers, fire retardants, lubricants, coagulants,
flocculants, chelating agents, agglutinates, and "other products of chemical
reactions that occur to give substances (materials) particular physical or
chemical properties so that they can perform their specific functions."
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"Existing" chemical substances, i.e. those that have been
published to the Inventory of Existing Chemical
Substances manufactured or imported in China (IECSC), are not
required to submit a notification. The IECSC is a dynamic list. Once the
environmental and public-health impact of a "new" chemical has been assessed
by the CRC-SEPA, it is published to the IECSC and is no longer managed
as a new chemical substance. In
2007, the IECSC included 45,021 chemical substances: |
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The public list may be searched on the CRC website, currently located at
http://www.crc-mep.org.cn/iecscweb/.
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There is also a
confidential list of 2,994 substances. A manufacturer/ importer may request
an internal CRC search
to confirm that his "new" chemical substance was not previously notified/registered. |
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The
Categories of Chemical Substances listed in Guidance Attachment 2
are also not considered "new" chemical substances: |
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Chemicals managed by other existing laws and regulations: such as
radioactive substances, military industry products, pyrotechnics, biological
substances, pesticides, veterinary drugs, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, foods
and food additives, feed and feed additives, tobacco and tobacco products |
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Substances existing in nature:
Substances processed only by manual, mechanical, gravitational,
water solubility or flotation or heat dehydration; substances
extracted from the atmosphere; and natural polymers without physical
or chemical processing |
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Special categories: glass, frit, pottery raw materials and ceramic
ware, steel and steel products, high alumina and Portland cements,
non-metallic alloys |
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Articles that maintain their overall structure and shape during final
use (incidental or surface chemical reactions are allowed), such as
batteries, fibers, thin film, leather, paper, yarn, pencils |
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Non-commercial or unintentionally produced substances: impurities,
waste water/gas/solids and by-products, reactions to environmental factors,
reactions during final use |
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In the following
situations, "new" chemicals are required to submit an application for
Notification Exemption (but no testing data is required): |
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Monomer is less than 2% of
the polymer |
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Test sample is for required ecotoxicological testing within China |
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Quantity for scientific research purposes is 100 kg or less |
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Quantity for technological research & development is 1,000 kg or less |
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China maintains three
lists of toxic chemicals: |
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"Prohibited"
commodities that may not be imported into China |
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"Prohibited" commodities that may not be exported from China |
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Toxic chemicals whose import/export is "severely restricted" |
Importing a chemical
on the "severely restricted" list is a two-step process. First, the foreign
business partner pays a $10,000 fee for a Registration
Certificate. The certificate (if approved by SEPA) is issued with a
quantity limit and is valid for two years. The domestic company then applies
for an Import Clearance Notification which is required for customs
clearance.
Domestic companies
that wish to export chemicals on the "severely restricted" list must also
apply to SEPA for an Export Clearance Notification.
This summary of
China PEANCS is designed to provide you with an accurate, easy-to-understand
overview of the topic and does not constitute legal advice. The actual
standard in the original language should be reviewed and used for all
business, legal, and product compliance purposes.
RSJ excels at helping you
collect and report the data about what is in your products. Once you have the underlying data about
your products in place, it can be analyzed against any standard or regulation worldwide.
We are here to help you!
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