2020 enforcement data reveals hand sanitiser imports violating EU chemical safety laws : Cefic

2020 enforcement data reveals hand sanitiser imports violating EU chemical safety laws : Cefic

By: ICN Bureau

Last updated : June 11, 2021 10:11 am



The findings confirm an urgent need for EU member states to step up enforcement of REACH particularly for imported goods


According to Cefic’s analysis of data reported through the EU’s ‘Safety Gate’, 2020 saw a steep increase in hand sanitiser imports not compliant with the EU chemicals safety rules. These products are either not marked as flammable, contain methanol (not compliant with the EU Classification and Labelling rules), or hold an insufficient percentage of ethanol to kill viruses (not compliant with the EU Biocides Regulation).

Some other key findings of this analysis include:


The findings confirm an urgent need for EU member states to step up enforcement of REACH particularly for imported goods, including from online marketplaces. Strengthening enforcement, especially in imports, has been identified as one of the areas of focus in the new Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability.

Sylvie Lemoine, Cefic Executive Director Product Stewardship said: “Not only do we need more coordinated enforcement at EU borders, but we also need to ensure the restrictions or bans we adopt in Europe are enforceable. This means enforcement authorities need to have the analytical tools, the lab capacity, and the budgets to control a representative sample of goods for the presence and amount of restricted chemicals. Non-compliant imports pose an unacceptable risk to consumers.”

Cefic Sylvie Lemoine

First Published : June 11, 2021 12:00 am