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SGS and ENVIRON Launch Exclusive Webinar on REACH SVHC and RoHS2 Challenges and Solutions

December 10, 2009

SGS and ENVIRON Launch Exclusive Webinar on REACH SVHC and RoHS2 Challenges and Solutions

SGS, the global leader in chemical testing and certification services and ENVIRON, a leading international environmental consultancy and manager of the industry-led substances declarations web database www.BOMcheck.net, will be launching a free webinar on the Registration, Evaluation, and Authorization of Chemical’s (REACH) Substances of Very High Concern (SVHC) and the challenges coming from the draft new Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive known as RoHS2 including CE Marking Requirements and proposed new substance restrictions.

The webinar will be held Tuesday, January 26, 2010 from 10.00am to 11.00am EST. It will provide essential information on how companies can adopt cost-effective approaches to REACH and RoHS2 compliance, particularly following the announcement by ECHA yesterday that 15 new SVHCs will be added to the REACH Candidate List in January. The webinar will also summarise the REACH substance restrictions and explain how the SVHC notification requirements in Article 7(2) and Article 66 apply to hardware products. The webinar will focus on practical solutions and highlight how analytical services and data management tools assist the leading equipment manufacturers and suppliers to match today’s legal challenges by sharing:

The key issues to be covered during the webinar are:

Enacted in 2006, the European Union REACH Regulation requires registration of chemicals and communication of Candidate List Substances of Very High Concern (SVHCs) to consumers. Any consumer, under REACH, has the right to request information on whether any specific product contains any of these SVHCs over 0.1% by weight and the supplier is required by law to communicate this information to the consumer within forty-five (45) days. Starting in June 2009, the REACH Regulation also restricts the use of certain substances in hardware products. The European Union RoHS Directive restricts the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment.

Free registration and further details about the webinar are available here

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