The European Union (EU)'s new chemical regulation will severely
impact the Chinese chemical industry, suggested Yan Bangsong,
deputy chairman of China Chamber of Commerce of Metals Minerals and
Chemicals Importers and Exporters (CCCMC), according to the
Shanghai Securities News.
The new regulations, known as REACH, or Registration,
Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals, were passed
by the European Parliament and the Council of EU on December 18,
2006.
Officials said REACH's aim is to "ensure a high level of
protection of human health and the environment," and "enhance
competitiveness and innovation".
REACH entered into force on June 1 this year, and will be
formally implemented on June 1 of 2008, said Zhou Chun, director of
CCCMC's petrochemical department.
China's No 1 overseas chemicals market, the EU imported more
than US$30 billion worth of chemical products, including energy and
metallurgy minerals, raw chemical materials, petrochemical
products, in the first eight months this year. That number is up 60
percent from the same period of last year.
However, according to REACH, within 11 years after the
implemention of the regulations, all chemicals produced in or
exported to the EU with a volume of more than one ton annually will
have to be registered.
Chemical materials or products that include chemical substances
must not be produced and sold in Europe, if they are not included
in the new framework.
The overall estimated expense for a single kind of product
during the licensing procedures accounts to between two and three
million yuan (US$266,372 to 399,558) under REACH. Just the basic
examination fees will total roughly one million yuan.
Based on CCCMC's calculation, total registration costs for
Chinese products will rise by as much as five percent. Some small
and medium enterprises will be eliminated altogether. And making
matters worse is the fact that some 200,000 workers may lose their
jobs.
Chinese chemical exporters will suffer the hardest as a result
of this latest technical trade barrier. There will be no escape for
chemical related industries, such as household appliances,
textiles, clothes, shoes, toys, electronic products, automobiles,
and medicines.
In the meantime, the export price of EU produced chemicals will
likely go up, increasing competitive pressure on Chinese companies
relying on those imported chemicals to survive.
(Chinadaily.com.cn October 19, 2007)