Guest guest Posted July 26, 2005 Report Share Posted July 26, 2005 Passing this along from Martin ... *Smile* Chris (list mom) http://www.alittleolfactory.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ INTERNATIONAL FRAGRANCE ASSOCIATION Matthias Vey, Dr.-Ing. Scientific Director 49, Square Marie-Louise B - 1000 BRUSSELS ...+32-2/238 99 04 - ..+32-2/230 02 65 Member Associations Members of the SC cc RIFM Members of the JAG Client Associations Information Letter 725 July 20, 2005 EU: Commission Directive 2005/42/EC Inclusion of Costus root oil, 7-Ethoxy-4-methylcoumarin, Hexahydrocoumarin and Peru balsam in Annex II of the European Cosmetics Directive (76/768/EEC) Dear Members, On June 21, 2005 Commission Directive 2005/42/EC of 20 June 2005 amending Council Directive 76/768/EEC, concerning cosmetic products, for the purpose of adapting Annexes II, IV and VI to technical progress, was published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Beyond some other ingredients 4 already IFRA banned fragrance ingredients are included into Annex II. These are Costus root oil (Saussurea lappa Clarke) (CAS No. 8023-88-9) 7-Ethoxy-4-methylcoumarin (CAS N0. 87-05-8) Hexahydrocoumarin (CAS No. 700-82-3) and Peru balsam (Myroxolon pereirae, CAS No. 8007-00-9). Directive 2005/42/EG entered into force on 11th July 2005 and must be transposed into national law by 31st December 2005. After 31st March 2006 cosmetic products containing the substances mentioned above must no longer be put on the market. The complete legal text can be accessed via the following link: <http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/lex/LexUriServ/site/en/oj/2005/l_158/l_158 20050621en00170019.pdf> http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/lex/LexUriServ/site/en/oj/2005/l_158/l_1582 0050621e\ n00170019.pdf In line with the underlying SCCP opinion (SCCNFP/0771/03, see IFRA IL 688 Version 2), IFRA interprets the ban of Peru balsam as a fragrance ingredient to apply only to the crude balsam. Extracts and distillates (albeit carrying the same CAS number) have a separate SCCP opinion (SCCNFP/0392/00, final) declaring them as safe up to the IFRA permitted use level of 0.4% in a finished product. Because of the lack of consistency between the Commission ruling and the SCCP opinions, EFFA, IFRA's European member association, in co-operation with COLIPA, will take this point up with the respective departments of the European Commission. Best regards, Matthias Vey IL725 ATP of Cosmetics Directive - IFRA banned ingredients July 20, 2005 1/1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 26, 2005 Report Share Posted July 26, 2005 with all of the bans going on, I am wondering the implications for US sellers? If I have a personal care product (or products) with Tea Tree Oil (or one of the following mentioned in this post) and sell it by my US based company on my US-based website with the intended target of US consumers (where these ingredients have not (as yet) been banned) ... if someone from the EU comes along to purchase, do i have to deny the sale? what is the protocol here? .... not like i get that many international orders, but i can envision a boost if these items are banned in EU but still available here. i'd hate to have to remove all the international shipping stuff i just added in!!! BUT on the other hand it's not like i can afford to have the EU coming after me for selling 4 oz of baby diaper powder with a grand total of one drop of Tea Tree oil in it!!! i suppose i could just say that orders from eu will be made w/o the TT EO but, gosh this is getting confusing also, is there a " definitive " list of oils banned in the EU and/or elsewhere? is it possible or practical to keep up with this as a " cottage industry " vendor? perhaps, I should go back to just being a web developer??? oh, let me guess, the EU is about to ban JavaScript now. LOL. better go check the developer message boards!! - " Christine Ziegler " <chrisziggy Tuesday, July 26, 2005 12:57 PM Costus Root and Crude Peruvian Balsam Banned From Use In European Cosmetics Passing this along from Martin ... *Smile* Chris (list mom) http://www.alittleolfactory.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ INTERNATIONAL FRAGRANCE ASSOCIATION Matthias Vey, Dr.-Ing. Scientific Director 49, Square Marie-Louise B - 1000 BRUSSELS ...+32-2/238 99 04 - ..+32-2/230 02 65 Member Associations Members of the SC cc RIFM Members of the JAG Client Associations Information Letter 725 July 20, 2005 EU: Commission Directive 2005/42/EC Inclusion of Costus root oil, 7-Ethoxy-4-methylcoumarin, Hexahydrocoumarin and Peru balsam in Annex II of the European Cosmetics Directive (76/768/EEC) Dear Members, On June 21, 2005 Commission Directive 2005/42/EC of 20 June 2005 amending Council Directive 76/768/EEC, concerning cosmetic products, for the purpose of adapting Annexes II, IV and VI to technical progress, was published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Beyond some other ingredients 4 already IFRA banned fragrance ingredients are included into Annex II. These are Costus root oil (Saussurea lappa Clarke) (CAS No. 8023-88-9) 7-Ethoxy-4-methylcoumarin (CAS N0. 87-05-8) Hexahydrocoumarin (CAS No. 700-82-3) and Peru balsam (Myroxolon pereirae, CAS No. 8007-00-9). Directive 2005/42/EG entered into force on 11th July 2005 and must be transposed into national law by 31st December 2005. After 31st March 2006 cosmetic products containing the substances mentioned above must no longer be put on the market. The complete legal text can be accessed via the following link: <http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/lex/LexUriServ/site/en/oj/2005/l_158/l_158 20050621en00170019.pdf> http://europa.eu.int/eur-lex/lex/LexUriServ/site/en/oj/2005/l_158/l_1582 0050621e\ n00170019.pdf In line with the underlying SCCP opinion (SCCNFP/0771/03, see IFRA IL 688 Version 2), IFRA interprets the ban of Peru balsam as a fragrance ingredient to apply only to the crude balsam. Extracts and distillates (albeit carrying the same CAS number) have a separate SCCP opinion (SCCNFP/0392/00, final) declaring them as safe up to the IFRA permitted use level of 0.4% in a finished product. Because of the lack of consistency between the Commission ruling and the SCCP opinions, EFFA, IFRA's European member association, in co-operation with COLIPA, will take this point up with the respective departments of the European Commission. Best regards, Matthias Vey IL725 ATP of Cosmetics Directive - IFRA banned ingredients July 20, 2005 1/1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2005 Report Share Posted July 28, 2005 Bonnie, Whatever is restricted in Europe does not directly affect the USA, but you can bet it will in time. The way such restrictions directly affect you is that producers will stop supplying the materials if their main markets are destroyed. I have heard that already some Australian growers of tea trees are considering pulling out of the market ahead of any regulations. The Australian growers are trying to challenge the proposed restrictions, but normally these idiot scientific advisory committees in the EEC get their own way. If you sell any product into European Union countries containing ingredients covered by their regulations, then in theory you have to comply with them. However, in practice the EEC do not have a centralised policing system to enforce their laws. Few suppliers of essential oils in the UK are complying with the sensitisers labelling regulations which have been in place a few years. Only a handful of local Trading Standards departments here are doing anything about it. Kind of doubt they would come after a small US supplier, but who knows. >is there a " definitive " list of oils banned in the EU< Currently very few are banned, but they seem to going at it hard to increase the number. This latest ban is on peru balsam not the oil. They rarely ban an oil, instead you have the sensitisers regulations which are based on chemicals that occur in oils and affect most of our common oils. Those regulations are simply mad but they are law! I have copies of most of the European laws relating to oils. Rather than people keep asking me for copies, it might be an idea to post them in the links section. Chris you listening?? >is it possible or practical to keep up with this as a " cottage< >industry " vendor?< Almost impossible because the EEC has always revolved around big companies. Their regulations are supposed to " harmonise " trade throughout the community. That activity can only increase the power of the multi nationals to produce and sell products in all member countries. The only small outfits the EEC commission care about are small French farmers! Martin Watt http://www.aromamedical.com , " Bonnie Walker " <webgrrl@w...> wrote: > with all of the bans going on, I am wondering the implications for US > sellers? If I have a personal care product (or products) with Tea Tree Oil > (or one of the following mentioned in this post) and sell it by my US based > company on my US-based website with the intended target of US consumers > (where these ingredients have not (as yet) been banned) ... if someone from > the EU comes along to purchase, do i have to deny the sale? what is the > protocol here? > > ... not like i get that many international orders, but i can envision a > boost if these items are banned in EU but still available here. i'd hate to > have to remove all the international shipping stuff i just added in!!! BUT > on the other hand it's not like i can afford to have the EU coming after me > for selling 4 oz of baby diaper powder with a grand total of one drop of Tea > Tree oil in it!!! i suppose i could just say that orders from eu will be > made w/o the TT EO but, gosh this is getting confusing > > also, is there a " definitive " list of oils banned in the EU and/or > elsewhere? is it possible or practical to keep up with this as a " cottage > industry " vendor? > > perhaps, I should go back to just being a web developer??? oh, let me guess, > the EU is about to ban JavaScript now. LOL. better go check the developer > message boards!! > > > - > " Christine Ziegler " <chrisziggy@e...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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