Korean government forms task force on EU's PFAS regulations

The South Korean government established a joint task force with local industry officials on Wednesday to respond to the European Union's plan to phase out per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). The EU plans to publish a draft opinion on PFAS restrictions later this month, aiming for universal adoption by 2027.

The South Korean government on Wednesday, March 25, established a joint task force with local industry officials to address the European Union's plan to phase out per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources said. The task force, including ministry officials, related business associations, and companies, aims to develop a preemptive response strategy ahead of the EU's planned publication of a draft opinion on PFAS restrictions later this month. The EU seeks to universally adopt these restrictions by 2027 at the latest, a development expected to impact a wide range of Korean industries, including semiconductors, batteries, and automobiles. PFAS, dubbed 'forever chemicals' for their strong carbon-fluorine bonds, are used in electronics and semiconductor manufacturing as well as everyday products like food packaging. They accumulate in the environment and human body due to resistance to heat, water, and oil. The ministry stated it will actively respond to the EU's regulatory push while aiding private industries in developing PFAS replacement materials. It has supported R&D projects for PFAS-free textiles and secondary battery materials since 2024. 'Since the EU's PFAS regulation could have wide-ranging impacts on our key industries, the public and private sectors should work closely together to systematically respond to different stages of the EU's push for regulatory legislation,' said Lee Min-woo, director general for industrial policy at the ministry.

Related Articles

Lab scientists testing PFAS-free firefighter turnout gear revealing brominated flame retardants, with chemical highlights on fabric.
Image generated by AI

Study finds brominated flame retardants in firefighter turnout gear, including newer PFAS-free models

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

A U.S. study has found brominated flame retardants in firefighter turnout gear, including in newer models marketed as PFAS-free. Published on December 16 in Environmental Science & Technology Letters, the research reports that some of these flame retardants appear at higher extractable levels than PFAS in certain gear layers, raising fresh questions about potential health risks to firefighters.

A team at Rice University has invented an eco-friendly material that rapidly captures and destroys PFAS, known as forever chemicals, in water sources. The technology outperforms existing methods by capturing pollutants thousands of times more efficiently and regenerating for reuse. Published in Advanced Materials, the breakthrough addresses a persistent global pollution challenge.

Reported by AI

The U.S. military has rejected requests from Okinawa for on-site inspections at its bases following detections of PFAS around the facilities. Japan's Defense Ministry announced the decision on Friday. The refusal stems from a lack of clear evidence linking the bases to the contamination and flaws in the prefecture's sampling plans.

The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy held a meeting with local industry officials on Thursday to discuss responses to the European Union's new Industrial Accelerator Act aimed at bolstering EU industrial capacity. The bill prioritizes low-carbon EU-made products in public procurement and imposes stricter foreign investment screenings. Korean companies urged the government to mitigate adverse effects and press the EU for relaxations.

Reported by AI

Following China's January 6 ban on dual-use exports to Japan—retaliation for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's Taiwan remarks—South Korea's industries face risks from interconnected supply chains. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources held an emergency meeting on January 8 to evaluate impacts and pledged safeguards against shortages.

Delegates from around 20 countries will hold three days of informal talks in Japan starting Sunday, aimed at salvaging efforts for a landmark global treaty on plastic pollution. Supposedly final talks in South Korea in 2024 failed, and a renewed effort in Geneva last August collapsed in overtime. A Japanese Environment Ministry official said the informal closed-door meeting among working-level officials through Tuesday is not expected to result in any official announcement.

Reported by AI

South Korea's government will temporarily designate naphtha as an economic security item amid supply shortages from the Middle East crisis. Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol announced measures like securing alternative imports and restricting exports. Petrochemical firms risk operational disruptions.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline