Announcement

State governments, which are at the frontline of fighting COVID-19, are also at the frontline of requiring businesses to disclose chemical ingredients in their products to consumers and public agencies. From California to New York consumers are demanding, and states are requiring, that companies disclose chemicals in cleaning, children’s, cosmetics, menstrual, and other products. But what are these disclosure requirements? And what can we learn from them?
The Northeast Waste Management Officials’ Associations’ Interstate Chemicals Clearinghouse (NEWMOA’s IC2) and Clean Production Action (CPA) partnered to review more than ten public policies that require the disclosure of chemicals in products and one industry standard that sets guidelines for disclosure in building products. Our new joint report, Chemical Ingredient Transparency in Products, highlights three forms of disclosure:
- ALL chemical ingredients in a product category, such as cleaning products (with limited exceptions for confidential business information).
- Chemicals, or classes of chemicals, of concern in products, such as requirements to disclose mercury and mercury compounds in nearly all products.
- Chemicals of concern in a category of products, such as children’s products.

Terri Goldberg, Executive Director of NEWMOA, stated, “We are excited to be working with a wide range of key stakeholders to advance chemical ingredient disclosure programs, and this report provides the needed background information to inform this important work.”
Join us for a webinar on May 20th at 3:00 pm EDT where co-authors Terri Goldberg and Topher Buck of NEWMOA/IMERC/IC2 and Mark S. Rossi of CPA present the findings and answer your questions