REACH Directive EU Regulation on Registration, Assessment, Licensing and Limitation of Chemicals (REACH Regulation) has passed the final vote of the European Council on December 18, 2006, and has been formally promulgated and will be fully implemented on June 1, 2007. REACH has replaced 40 existing EU regulations and become a unified set of regulations governing the registration, assessment, licensing and restriction of chemicals. It has a comprehensive registration and evaluation system involving about 30,000 chemicals, requiring all "existing" or "new" chemicals with annual production or import volume of more than 1 ton to be registered in order to provide relevant safety information. If any substance of high concern (SVHC) exceeds 0.1% and the annual import volume of the substance exceeds 1 ton, the EU manufacturer or importer must notify the European Chemicals Administration (ECHA). The ECHA of the European Chemicals Administration publishes a list of SVHC candidates for substances of high concern. Once a substance is added to the list, REACH regulations will immediately require manufacturers and importers to declare. There are 151 substances on the SVHC list. All manufacturers, exporters and retailers operating in the EU market should ensure that their products do not contain these SVHCs in order to avoid penalties and product recalls. Compliance with REACH regulations is a major challenge for most companies. REACH is a set of regulations covering chemicals and their related industries. REACH involves almost all products exported to the EU. How to face the challenge? How to deal with REACH registration, notification, licensing and restriction requirements? It is expected that in the next few years, there will be a large number of material safety data sheets (SDS). How to judge whether SDS meets the REACH requirements? BORY relies on its strong technical support to tailor-made comprehensive and accurate REACH compliance services to help you easily respond to REACH requirements. Detailed interpretation of REACH regulations will help to understand the requirements of regulations, consulting and information announcements to classify each product, confirm its chemical information and safety data sheet SDS, and check whether products contain high-concern substances. The REACH obligation analysis of the product evaluates whether the product needs to be registered, notified, restricted and conforms to other REACH requirements. The SVHC test makes targeted tests on some high-risk components to confirm that the substances of high concern are below the concentration limit. Timely notification of customer SVHC list updates.