Tag Archives: RIP-oN 1

Bureaucratic incomprehensibility: REACH Nanomaterials Implementation Projects

This looks to be one of those announcements made by an organization that is simply going through the motions or perhaps they’ve forgotten that no one understands bureaucratese unless they’re intimately involved.

This first bit isn’t so bad, from the Oct.19, 2011 news item on Nanowerk,

Final reports have been published from two REACH Implementation Projects on Nanomaterials (RIP-oN 2&3). Commissioned by the JRC’s Institute for Health & Consumer Protection, the projects intended to develop specific advice on the implementation of REACH for nanomaterials. The outputs from the projects have been developed over a period of 12-16 months in consultation with a range of stakeholders. The reports have scoped the current state-of-the-science regarding assessment of nanomaterials in the context of REACH, and provide recommendations to the European Commission on how the REACH Guidance on Information Requirements and Chemical Safety Assessment could be further developed to better address nanomaterials.

So we have two final reports. Here’s the description of the reports,

The RIP-oN 2 project has addressed the REACH information requirements on intrinsic properties of nanomaterials, and the information needed for safety evaluation of nanomaterials. The RIP-oN 3 project has addressed exposure assessments and hazard and risk characterisation for nanomaterials within the REACH context.

Not the most informative description I’ve ever read. And as it turns out, there’s a third report,

Under a separate process, a third report from the RIPoN activity relating to Substance Identity (Rip-oN 1) has also been published. This report is also available online, however, according to the Commission it was not possible to reach consensus amongst the experts on the recommendations, therefore further work of the Commission, in collaboration with CARACAL, is required before recommendations can be forwarded to ECHA

Maybe a government bureaucrat understands some of this?