CPTS LTD

CONSUMER PRODUCTS TESTING SOLUTIONS

Consulting by CPTS covers all aspects of product safety compliance management.

Guidance to the beginning, middle, and end of a products life-cycle.
 

When you may need QA consulting:

Growing number of projects

Rapid company Growth

Quality decrease due to bottlenecks

 Adoption of new methodologies or practices

New publication standard for Safety of Toys AUS/NZ

On 12 February 2021, the standard AS/NZS ISO 8124.3:2021 Safety of Toys, Part 3: Migration of certain elements was published by Standard Australian and Standard New Zealand. It identically adopts ISO 8124-3:2020, which specifies maximum acceptable levels and methods of sampling, extraction and determination for the migration of antimony, arsenic, barium, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury and selenium from toy materials and from parts of toys. It does not apply to packaging materials, unless they are intended to be kept, for example boxes and containers, or unless they form part of the toy or have intended play value.

Toxic-Free Kids Act: Implementation of Phase 3

On 1st March 2021, the Oregon Health Authority published  Phase 3 of the Toxic-Free Kids Act which requires manufacturers of children's products sold in Oregon to report products that contain one or more high priority chemicals of concern for children's health (HPCCCH), and ultimately remove these chemicals, look for an alternative to make the product less hazardous  or seek a waiver approved by the Authority.

 

This Phase indicates detailed requirements for manufacturers of three specific categories of children's products:

 

  • Children under three years old;

  • "mouthable" items, per ORS 431A.253(8); and

  • Children's cosmetics.

For getting the HPCCCH list, consult the Oregon Health Authority website here.

The French government published a decree to clarify that face covering masks with a filtration efficiency lower than 90% are not recommended due to Covid-19 virus mutation

To avoid the spread of mutated Covid-19, the French government published a new decree, n° 2021-76, on January 27, 2021 and updated the Cross Ministries Note on January 28, 2021, recommending using masks with a higher filtration efficiency; face masks with a filtration efficiency lower than 90% are not recommended.

The decree mentioned:

  1. Face masks are mandatory in any public area.

  2. At point of sale, compliant masks must be separated from non-compliant masks and distributors must inform when masks comply or not with sanitary authorities' recommendations.

  3. The face masks must comply with requirements listed and belong to one of the below categories:

    • Surgical mask complying to EN 14683 + AC: 2019 (or equivalent).

    • Imported masks with surgical shape, excluding textile fabric masks, which perform at least equal to masks mentioned at the 4th bullet point.

    • FFP2 or FFP3 mask complying to EN 149 + A1: 2009 (or equivalent) without expiratory valve.

    • Mask for Non-Sanitary Use (UNS) complying with:

      1. Particle filtration efficiency > 90% (3 microns);

      2. Breathability allowing wearing the mask for 4 hours;

      3. Air permeability > 96L/m²/s (differential pressure 100Pa);

      4. Good fit of the mask on the face, no sagittal seam;

      5. If reusable, the performance levels mentioned should be maintained after at least five washes.

Above requirements must be checked by an approved 3rd party lab and according to conditions mentioned in government decision. It is important to note that reusable textile masks can still be used if they comply with this updated requirement.

French decree n° 2021-76:
https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/jorf/id/JORFTEXT000043070201

Approved 3rd party lab:
https://www.entreprises.gouv.fr/fr/covid-19/entreprises-comment-faire-tester-masques