🕵️ Advanced Materials Policy Monitor Daily
Date: April 21, 2026 | Risk Level: 🟠 Medium-High
⚠️ Major Update 1: EU REACH SVHC Candidate List Officially Expanded to 253 Substances
Published: April 20, 2026
Authority: European Chemicals Agency (ECHA)
Risk Level: 🟠 Medium-High
What Changed
ECHA has made final decisions on substances under review, formally adding the following 2 substances to the SVHC Candidate List:
- n-Hexane — CAS 111-27-3, widely used as a solvent in electronics cleaning, adhesives, and coatings
- 4,4′-[2,2,2-Trifluoro-1-(trifluoromethyl)ethylidene]diphenol (BPAF) and its salts — A fluorinated bisphenol used in high-performance polymers, specialty coatings, and electronic packaging materials
The SVHC Candidate List has grown from 251 to 253 substances.
Impact Analysis
- EU Exporters: Products containing these substances above 0.1% w/w must provide safety data to downstream users/consumers within 45 days and notify ECHA
- Broad n-Hexane impact: As a universal solvent, it affects electronics, textiles, footwear, packaging — supply chain screening workload is significant
- BPAF & fluorinated materials: Fluoropolymer supply chains (PTFE alternatives, specialty fluorocarbon coatings) require focused screening
🎯 Action Items
- Immediately launch supply chain screening for n-Hexane and BPAF content
- For n-Hexane products: verify content in cleaning processes and adhesive formulations
- For BPAF products: focus on fluoropolymers, electronic packaging, and specialty coatings
- Update SDS documents and prepare SVHC notification files
- Evaluate substitution options, especially green solvent alternatives for n-Hexane
⚠️ Major Update 2: China to Suspend All Sulfuric Acid Exports from May 1, 2026
Announced: April 10, 2026
Effective: May 1, 2026
Risk Level: 🔴 High
What Changed
China officially announced a full suspension of ordinary industrial-grade sulfuric acid exports effective May 1, 2026. Only electronic-grade sulfuric acid and a few high-value specialty categories may receive special exemption approval. The ban is expected to last through the end of 2026. Products under the export ban include smelting by-product sulfuric acid and sulfur-based acid mainstream industrial-grade products.
Impact Analysis
- Global supply chain shock: China is the world’s largest sulfuric acid producer; the export ban will severely impact international supply
- Downstream cascade effects: Sulfuric acid is essential for fertilizers (phosphate), titanium dioxide, and hydrometallurgy — significant price volatility expected
- Domestic Chinese companies: Sulfuric acid supply will be abundant domestically; production costs may decrease, but export-oriented firms must restructure trade strategies
- International buyers: Must urgently source alternatives (Japan, Korea, Middle East) — short-term procurement costs will rise significantly
🎯 Action Items
- Chinese exporters: Immediately reassess sulfuric acid-related export strategies; apply for electronic-grade special approval
- International buyers: Urgently lock in alternative supply sources and build safety stock
- Fertilizer/titanium dioxide producers: Assess raw material cost volatility risk and adjust pricing strategies
- Monitor whether the ban will be extended into 2027
📋 Other Notable Updates
| Policy/Standard | Status | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| GB/T 36132-2025 Green Factory Evaluation | Effective (Dec 31, 2025) | Major revision: “New Five Orientations,” 14 quantitative metrics |
| Petrochemical Old Equipment Renewal Plan (2026-2029) | MIIT press conference (Apr 3) | Five ministries jointly promoting equipment upgrades |
| April 1, 2026 batch national standards | Effective | Covers PV, transport, supply chain sectors |
🕵️ Market Intelligence Officer | Sources: ECHA, MIIT, SAC | This report is for reference only. Consult professional advisors for compliance actions.
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