Chemicals
CIRS Group
Chemicals
Cosmetic
Food
Medical Devices
Agrochemicals
CIRS Testing
Carbon Neutrality
Search

UK Launches Consultation on Revised Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) Regulations

from CIRS by

On  March 18, 2026, the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) officially launched a public consultation on amendments to the Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) Regulations, proposing to add five new persistent organic pollutants to the prohibited list and adjust control requirements for certain existing substances.

Background

The United Kingdom is a party to the Stockholm Convention, which aims to eliminate or restrict persistent organic pollutants (POPs) to address their risks to human health and the environment. At the recent Conference of the Parties, a global agreement was reached to prohibit five substances (listing them in Annex A of the Convention), including medium-chain chlorinated paraffins, long-chain perfluorocarboxylic acids, chlorpyrifos, UV-328, and Dechlorane Plus.

Five Proposed New POPs Substances

Substance

Primary Uses

Implementation Date

Medium-Chain Chlorinated Paraffins (MCCPs)

Plasticizers, flame retardants, metalworking fluids

December 16, 2026

Long-Chain Perfluorocarboxylic Acids (LC-PFCAs)

Semiconductors, food packaging, firefighting foams

December 16, 2026

Chlorpyrifos

Insecticide (already phased out)

December 16, 2026

UV-328

UV absorber (plastics, coatings, automotive applications)

February 26, 2025 (already in effect)

Dechlorane Plus

Chlorinated flame retardant

February 26, 2025 (already in effect)

Key Amendments

  1. Specific Use Exemptions
    • Provide transition periods for critical industries, allowing continued use for a limited time period
    • MCCPs, LC-PFCAs, UV-328, and Dechlorane Plus all have exemption provisions
    • There are no exemptions for chlorpyrifos (as there are no known uses remaining in the UK)
  2. Unintentional Trace Contaminant (UTC) Limits
    • Allow substances to be present at very low concentrations without knowledge
    • Proposed UTC limits vary by substance, for example:
      • MCCPs: ≤3% in substances/mixtures, ≤0.45% in articles
      • LC-PFCAs: 0.025 mg/kg (salts), 1.0 mg/kg (sum of related compounds)
      • Chlorpyrifos: ≤0.01 mg/kg
  3. Revisions to Existing PFOS Provisions
    • Lower PFOS UTC limits to stricter levels (≤0.025 mg/kg for salts, ≤1 mg/kg for related compounds)
    • Remove outdated references to CEN standards

Consultation Questions

  1. Level of support for prohibitions on the five new POPs
  2. Whether specific exemption provisions are adequate or excessive
  3. Technical feasibility and economic impact of UTC limits
  4. Impact of regulatory differences from EU rules on supply chains and trade
  5. Whether the EU's new UTC limits for PBDEs (polybrominated diphenyl ethers) should be implemented in Great Britain

This public consultation will close on May 13, 2026. Interested stakeholders may submit comments through Defra's Citizen Space platform or the GOV.UK website, or email pops@defra.gov.uk to participate.

If you need any assistance or have any questions, please get in touch with us via service@cirs-group.com.

Further Information

DEFRA

  

We have launched a LinkedIn newsletter to keep you up to date on the latest developments across the chemical industry including food and FCMs and personal and home care.

Contact Us
+353 1 477 3710 (EU)
+44 20 3239 9430 (UK)
+1 703 520 1420 (USA)
+86 571 8720 6574 (CN)
+82 2 6347 8816 (KR)
+81 070-9365-8022 (JP)