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Swedish government cuts the budget on chemical safety

2022-12-14 Reference source : Swedish Chemicals Agency (KEMI)

EU REACH Product authorisation


On 1 December 2022, the Swedish Chemicals Agency (KEMI) published an announcement asking the government for more funding to ensure that Sweden can fulfil the demands of EU’s Market Surveillance Regulation. This regulation that came into force in July 2021, establishes new processes and frameworks for market surveillance, customs, and regulatory enforcement authorities from each member state to work together to take non-compliant articles off the EU market.

In the future KEMI wants to strengthen and expand market control in the chemical sector to better protect human health and the environment and create fairer competition for companies on the Swedish market

KEMI is planning to implement the following measures to make it easier for the companies to act in accordance with the regulations:

  • Increase the quantity of inspections and analyses of chemicals and biocides
  • Systematic follow-up of companies that have previously failed during inspections
  • Increase the development of methods for controlling markets
  • Develop and adapt guidance rules for the municipalities that perform parts of the market controls
  • Collaborate with Swedish customs to identify companies that have not previously been inspected.

The request for extra funding is a result of the budget for 2023-2025 that was recently unveiled by Sweden’s new right-wing government. The budget allocated to KEMI was lower than expected. The budget decisions follow the government’s decision to close the Ministry of the Environment as a separate ministry.

KEMI is one of five European authorities (together with Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Norway) that are preparing a restriction proposal covering all per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) which is expected in January 2023.



We acknowledge that the above information has been compiled from Swedish Chemicals Agency (KEMI).

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