[email protected]+44 (0)1743 818 293 www.events.chemicalwatch.com Global Business Summit 2018 13-14 March 2018, Amsterdam The Netherlands Global Business Summit 2018 About the event The 2018 Chemical Watch Global Business Summit is taking a fresh approach to tackling the challenges of managing hazardous chemicals in products. Over two days, we are focusing on four key challenges: • Tracking substances of concern in articles • The circular economy • Endocrine disruptors; and, • Nanomaterials. For each challenge, we have recognised experts explaining the current state of play, from a regulatory and voluntary perspective in Europe, and where relevant further afield. The 2018 Summit features leading organisations revealing how they are dealing with, and creating opportunities from, these challenges. Panel discussion sessions throughout the Summit will provide a view of best practice and what the future might bring. Heads of Regulatory Affairs/ Regulatory Managers REACH Compliance Officers EHS Directors/Managers Product Stewardship Professionals Government Regulators Product Registration Managers Lawyers in Private Practice In-House Counsel Who should attend? Why attend? Engaging and productive With a hand-picked panel, an excellent schedule of forward-looking presentations and discussions, not to mention over 100 participants from all over the world, this event promises to be an engaging and productive experience for all attending. Expert panel Listen to senior representatives from government, industry and other stakeholders. Current thinking Gain valuable insight into the global management of safer chemicals Time efficiency Bring yourself up-to-date with the complex and changeable global chemical supply chain landscape and ask questions to which your organisation needs answers. Q&A panel sessions Have your specific questions answered by making use of the multiple Q&A sessions. Remember – we encourage attendees to send in any questions in writing in advance of the Summit. Networking Meet your peers, including our expert panel of speakers, in the informal, relaxed setting of the Amsterdam Marriott Hotel in the heart of Amsterdam.
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The 2018 Chemical Watch Global Business Summit is taking a fresh approach to tackling the challenges of managing hazardous chemicals in products.
Over two days, we are focusing on four key challenges:
• Tracking substances of concern in articles
• The circular economy
• Endocrine disruptors; and,
• Nanomaterials.
For each challenge, we have recognised experts explaining the current state of play, from a regulatory and voluntary perspective in Europe, and where relevant further afield. The 2018 Summit features leading organisations revealing how they are dealing with, and creating opportunities from, these challenges. Panel discussion sessions throughout the Summit will provide a view of best practice and what the future might bring.
Heads of Regulatory Affairs/Regulatory Managers
REACH Compliance Officers
EHS Directors/Managers
Product Stewardship Professionals
Government Regulators
Product Registration Managers
Lawyers in Private Practice
In-House Counsel
Who should attend?
Why attend?
Engaging and productiveWith a hand-picked panel, an excellent schedule of forward-looking presentations and discussions, not to mention over 100 participants from all over the world, this event promisesto be an engaging and productive experience for all attending.
Expert panelListen to senior representatives from government, industry and other stakeholders.
Current thinkingGain valuable insight into the global management of safer chemicals
Time efficiencyBring yourself up-to-date with the complex and changeable global chemical supply chain landscape and ask questions to which your organisation needs answers.
Q&A panel sessionsHave your specific questions answered by making use of the multiple Q&A sessions. Remember – we encourage attendees to send in any questions in writing in advance of the Summit.
NetworkingMeet your peers, including our expert panel of speakers, in the informal, relaxed setting of the Amsterdam Marriott Hotel in the heart of Amsterdam.
Moderator: Erwin Annys, Director REACH/Chemicals Policy, Cefic, Belgium
08:30 Coffee and registration
Session 1: Tracking SVHCs in products
09:00 Welcome and introduction
Erwin Annys, Director REACH/Chemicals Policy, Cefic, Belgium
Focus: Current initiatives
09:05 The Danish consumer APP tracking SVHC chemicals in consumer products – a case from the Danish retail market
• Danish market experience using the APP tracking SVHCs
• When do consumers get benefits using the tracking APP?
• Responsibilities when informing consumers about SVHCs
• The way forward for solid consumer information about
SVHCs
Jakob Lamm Zeuthen, Head of Environment Policy,
The Danish Chamber of Commerce, Denmark
09:25 The AskREACH project - which will raise awareness on Substances of Very High Concern in articles among the European population, retailers and industry.
• Duty for article suppliers to communicate information on
SVHCs in their articles
• LIFE AskREACH aims to facilitate SVHC communication
between consumers and companies and between
companies along the supply chain
• Database for article suppliers and smartphone app for
consumers
• A supply chain communication tool for companies
• Invitation to volunteer as pilot companies
Arno Biwer, Senior R&T Associate, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, Luxembourg
09:45 Tools identified to ensure transparency and traceability of substances of concern in articles
• Examples of where regulatory challenges are not
yet understood
• Additional circular economy challenges
• Solutions
Martin Fuehr, Professor for Public Law, Comparative Law and Legal Theory, Darmstadt University, Germany
10:05 It’s time for a more comprehensive Candidate List, SIN List shows the way
• Why the Candidate List is so important
• Population of the Candidate List is has become more and
more complex and slow
• How the SIN List has played and will continue to
play a role
• How, and when, can we reach the ”2020 target”
Anne-Sofie Andersson, Executive Director, ChemSec, Sweden
10:25 Q&A
10:40 Refreshments
Focus: How companies are approaching tracking SVHCs in their products
11:05 Experiences from the healthcare sector
• What is material declaration in the context of the
healthcare industry and why is it becoming critical?
• Roche’s philosophy and approach to material declaration
• Challenges of implementation: Complexity and extent of
the task
• The Golden Rule or where does this road go?
Jan Backmann, Head Chemical Legislation, F.Hoffmann-La
Roche Ltd, Switzerland
11:25 Paramo, experiences from the textiles sector
12:05 Tracing substances across the supply chain: with specific reference to aerospace and defence industries
• Aerospace specific examples - review of how industry
standard was created
• Issues still faced with data
• Brexit - chaos and complexity - supply chain movement of
articles, expected impact
• Sustainability - moving towards recycling and reuse
• Blockchains - The basis for future state chemical
substance reporting
Raj Takhar, Subject Matter Expert - Materials Management and Chemical Reporting (Europe) Assent Compliance Inc, UK
12:25 Material Disclosure vs. Circular Economy – An Automotive Perspective
• Plastic usage in cars
• Substances in Articles - Challenge of data collection for
complex articles
• The way, the Automotive Industry has solved it
• Why is it so difficult for other sectors to follow the AI
example?
• The reason why industry as a whole has to have a solution
soon -> REACH, consumer expectations and the circular
economy (CE)
• Why is the current discussion on CE looking into the
wrong solutions => Dismantling
Timo Unger, Manager Environmental Affairs, Hyundai Motor Europe, Technical Centre GmbH, Germany
12:45 Q&A
13:00 Lunch
14:00 Panel session: SVHCs in products including discussion on initiatives
The panel will aim to assess what works – in terms of effective knowledge on SVHCs in products – what still needs to be addressed, and how different stakeholders can work together to improve information and management of SVHCs in articles
Session 2: The circular economy
Moderator: Linda-Jean Cockcroft, Technical Director (Business, Industry & Growth), Risk & Policy Analysts, UK
Focus: The EU Commission consultation on the interface between chemicals, products and waste legislation
14:30 Keynote address: The Commission’s Communication on the interface between chemicals, products and waste legislation
Jody Quirke, Legal and Policy Officer, DG ENVIRONMENT, Directorate B –Circular Economy & Green Growth, Unit B.2 –
Sustainable Chemicals, European Commission, Belgium
14:50 Response to the EU commission consultation on roadmap for chemicals, products and waste
• Circular economy and the furniture sector: challenges
and opportunities
• A smart chemical policy
• The need to close the cycle: why the interphase matters
and EFIC suggestions
Roberta Dessi, Secretary General, European Furniture
Industries Federation, Belgium
15:10 The recycling industry’s views on the interface between chemicals, products and waste legislation
• Why chemicals legislation needs to be adapted to the
specificities of the recycling industry
• Specific challenges faced by the recycling industry within
the current regulatory framework – concrete examples
• Position of the recycling industry and proposals for the
way forward concerning the 4 key issues identified by the
European Commission in its consultation document
Melissa Zill, Scientific Officer, European Recycling Industries’
Confederation (EuRIC) AISBL, Belgium
15:30 Q&A
15:45 Refreshments
Focus: How companies/product designers take account of circular economy
16:10 The textiles industry
• Why we are interested in circular economy
• Design restrictions to cope with recycling
• Initiatives to reduce waste
• The difficulty of getting a recycling partnership in place
• Where we are now, targets for input transition
Gareth Mottram, Commercial Director, Paramo Directional Clothing, UK
• HP circular economy strategy: products, practices,
and services
• Some circular economy examples in HP inspired by
○ decoupling growth from consumption,
○ disrupting industry business models
○ digitalizing supply chains and products
• Some fundamental challenges from the design phase
to the policy framework
Manuel Sosa-Skrainka, Sustainability Manager Benelux Region, HP, Nederland ICT, SAE, The Netherlands
16:50 Coatings and manufacturing
• Circular economy in the coatings industry in the UK
• PaintCare- the UK’s remanufactured paint initiative and
how similar schemes have worked in other countries
• Examples of circular economy in UK manufacturing
Ellen Daniels, Head of Public Affairs and Policy, British
Coatings Federation, UK
17:10 Q&A
17:25 Panel on Circular Economy focus: How will circular economy activities impact chemicals management activities at the business level; how should businesses prepare - will the EU circular economy package be a game changer?
17:50 Conclusion and close of Day one
Day two, 14 March 2018
Session 3: EDCs
Moderator: Emma Chynoweth, Chief Customer Officer,
Chemical Watch
08:30 Coffee
09:00 Keynote address: EU policy on EDCs
• EU strategy for EDCs
• EU legislative framework
• EDC criteria
• Test methods and guidelines for identification of EDCs
Peter Korytar, Policy Coordinator, DG Environment, EU Commission
09:20 Danish policy on EDCs
• Danish Parliament Agreement on Chemicals Initiatives
for 2018-2021 – main policy objectives and initiatives
relevant to EDs and EDCs
• Zooming in: Danish policy on EDCs
• Main challenges seen from an EU-MS Perspective
Sonja Canger, Head of Division, – Pesticides & Biocides,
09:45 Challenges for industry in dealing with the EDC criteria
• EDC criteria principle concern
• Potentially impacted regulations
• As example plant protection :
○ impact on industry and beyond,
○ concrete case with EU criteria
• The guidance document possible challenges
Ellen Dhein, Senior Manager Product Stewardship, Bayer AG Corporate Health Safety & Sustainability, Germany
10:10 Q&A
10:25 Refreshments
10:50 Concerns on how effective the EDC criteria will be in protecting the environment and human health
• Is the burden of proof too high?
• Will the mode of action analysis block the decisions?
• Is focus of the guidance document too narrow (focusing
on EATS)?
• Will non-mammalian species remain unprotected?
Angeliki Lyssimachou, Environmental Toxicologist, PAN Europe, Belgium
11:15 Supermarkets struggling to control EDCs - can this make a difference?
• Examples of how and why Coop works with identifying
and banning known EDCs in products
• Why not to wait for legislation
• Examples of how to involve consumers and
raise awareness
Malene Teller Blume, Quality Manager, Coop Danmark A/S, Denmark
11:40 Q&A
11:55 Panel discussion: As the EU progresses criteria to identify EDCs, how can companies prepare? Do the criteria give some clarity on future expectations of the regulators, when should businesses act and what are the first steps to take?
Session 4: Nanomaterials - what are the stakeholder views on the REACH annexes, the definition of nano, nano mandatory registers/observatory and impacts on business
Moderator: Frans Christensen, Chief Market Manager, Senior
Project Leader COWI A/S, Denmark
13:20 Setting the scene, the ECHA register, developing guidance