Did you know? Your product may have already crossed the red line of global regulations!
PFAS, known as "forever chemicals", have become a new focus of green trade barriers in various countries due to their difficulty in degradation and potential health risks, directly determining the market access qualifications of products.
French ring 2026 first gun, January 1, comprehensive ban cosmetics containing PFAS, textile and footwear. The REACH regulation has brought an increasing number of PFAS substances like PFHxA (perfluorohexanoic acid) under supervision. As of October 2026, their content has been strictly limited to within 0.025mg/kg. Several states in the United States have already enacted laws, and the scope of control has been continuously expanding from children's products, food packaging to textiles, cosmetics and more. A global crackdown on PFAS has already begun.
Under this, many using fluoride as flame retardant or drop resistance agent are panicking: customers are requesting PFAS Free, can all fluorine-containing additives not be used?
There is a key cognitive error: "containing fluorine" is not equal to "PFAS". PFAS specifically refers to certain types of harmful substances, such as perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS). Many stable fluoropolymers or specific fluorine compounds are not on this list of harmful substances. In simple terms, the regulations restrict the "bad elements" within the PFAS family, rather than all people with the surname "fluorine".
In the face of increasingly stringent environmental regulations, how to ensure that your products do not trample ray? Our Rising Star flame-retardant and anti-drip agent has been thoroughly verified through market practice and can smoothly pass the screening of international authoritative institutions such as SGS, safeguarding your materials. Instead of passively waiting for elimination, it's better to proactively choose a good solution.