Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008, commonly known as the CLP Regulation (Classification, Labelling and Packaging), is the European Union's primary legislation for identifying and communicating the hazards of chemical substances and mixtures. It aligns the EU system with the United Nations Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS). The Regulation amends and repeals the previous Dangerous Substances Directive (67/548/EEC) and Dangerous Preparations Directive (1999/45/EC), and amends the REACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006.
The primary objective of the CLP Regulation is to ensure a high level of protection for human health and the environment while enabling the free movement of substances, mixtures, and articles within the EU market. It achieves this by establishing uniform criteria for classifying chemicals based on their hazards (physical, health, and environmental) and standardizing communication tools like labels and Safety Data Sheets (SDS).
The regulation applies to:
Certain sectors and products are exempt from CLP regarding classification, labelling, and packaging because they are covered by more specific legislation, particularly when in the finished state intended for the final user:
Penalties for non-compliance are established by individual Member States. They must be effective, proportionate, and dissuasive. Enforcement authorities perform controls, and non-compliance can lead to market withdrawal mandates, fines, or criminal proceedings depending on the national implementation.
The CLP Regulation has been in force since 2009, with major historical deadlines passed (2010 for substances, 2015 for mixtures).
Current and Future Timeline (Business Perspective):
Poison Centre Notification (Annex VIII):
New Hazard Classes (Endocrine Disruptors, PBT, vPvB, PMT, vPvM):
Label Formatting & Digital Labelling (2024 Revision):