Ban of BPA substitutes

New York City plans to extent current bisphenol A ban by prohibiting 6 BPA substitutes in children’s products

Dispute over latest SVHC entry of BPA

Industry groups say the latest decision to identify BPA as SVHC for endocrine disruption effects in the environment is ‘disproportionate’ and lacks regulatory value; ECHA comments that this entry will impact the scope of the authorization requirement

Bisphenol S

Bisphenol S is used as a substitute of BPA in food contact materials, in a context article the Food Packaging Forum reports on applications, toxicity, exposure and regulation of BPS