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Guide to categorising your chemical importation and manufacture
All industrial chemical importers and manufacturers must categorise their chemical introduction. This step-by-step guide takes you through the process of categorisation.
Last updated
Version | Description | Date |
3.2 | Refined requirements to prove the absence of bioaccumulation potential in step 5.4 and specific target organ toxicity after repeated exposure in step 4.4 | 24 September 2024 |
3.1 | All references and requirements related to 'personal vaporiser' removed. The use of chemicals in vaping goods, or as vaping goods, are not an industrial use from 1 July. | 1 July 2024 |
3 | Changes incorporated into the Categorisation Guide to reflect amendments to the Categorisation Guidelines and amendments to the Industrial Chemicals (General) Rules 2019 both of which came into effect on 24 April 2024. | 24 April 2024 |
2.4 | Step 2 - Introductions that are categorised as exempted Examples added to the section dealing with polymers that are comparable to listed polymers and information added with examples regarding determining percent by weight. | 24 October 2023 |
2.3 | Step 4.1 and Step 5.1 The draft OECD TG 125 on particle size and particle size distribution on nanomaterials is now final and part of our guidance. We've updated the content related to nanoscale introductions as a result. Step 6 Clearer instructions on how to use the health and environment risk to work out the introduction category. | 30 May 2023 |
2.2 | Step 3 - Introductions that are in the reported category Provided more clarity around 3.2 Low-risk flavour and fragrance blend introductions regarding human health hazard characteristics and environmental hazard characteristics requirements. | 17 February 2023 |
2.1 | Step 3 - Introductions that are in the reported category Added the following 2 chemicals to question 2, part 3.1 Introductions of 10 kg or less in an AICIS registration year. Benzene, 1,2,3,4,5-pentachloro- Benzene, hexachloro- | 8 February 2023 |
2.0 | Step 0 - Introductions that are in the listed category Improvements made to the page around next steps if you have categorised your introduction as listed by adding links to a new page in the guide 'Your obligations after categorisation'. Step 2 - Introductions that are in the exempted category Improvements made to the page around next steps if you have categorised your introduction as exempted by adding links to a new page in the guide 'Your obligations after categorisation'. Step 3 - Introductions that are in the reported category Criteria added for a new type of low-volume reported introduction of 10 kg or less per year. We've also provided more clarity around next steps depending on the outcome at step 3. This includes adding links to a new page 'Your obligations after categorisation' if an introducer has categorised their introduction as reported at this step. Step 6 - Complete your categorisation We've moved some content on this page on reporting and record-keeping obligations to the new page 'Your obligations after categorisation'. Your obligations after categorisation This new page gives an overview about reporting and record-keeping obligations for introducers after they've categorised their introduction as one of the following:
| 25 November 2022 |
1.4 | Steps 4.1 and 5.1 – Is your chemical a certain chemical at the nanoscale? More options added in a question and answer format to help introducers work out if they are introducing this type of chemical. Steps 4.1 and 5.1 – Where an introduction is a specified class of introduction More information added, including when introductions are specified classes, our concerns about them, and that extra information will be required from introducers when submitting an assessment application for a specified class of introduction. Content has been added under these headings:
Steps 4.5 and 5.5 – Special cases - introductions that cannot have a very low indicative human health risk and introductions that cannot have a very low indicative environment risk Added this extra point to make it clear this type of chemical cannot have a very low indicative risk for human health or the environment: 'OR
Step 6 – Next steps: If your introduction is categorised as assessed Added the next step required if the chemical is on the Inventory. Clarified the outcome when the chemical is not on the Inventory. | 30 March 2022 |
1.3 | Step 1: added words shown in bold text: '...can not be categorised as an exempted or reported introduction unless it is both of the following:
Step 2: clearer explanation of the nanoscale criteria for research and development and chemicals resulting from non-functionalised surface treatment of listed chemicals; removed 'Tylosin, (2R,3R)-2,3-dihydroxybutanedioate (1:1)' with CAS number 74610-55-2 from the comparable chemicals table and improved the instructions on how to use the table. Step 3: clearer explanation of the nanoscale criteria for research and development. Step 5.3: added statement to clarify that a chemical with an end use in an air freshener is not a 'designated kind or release into the environment' Correction: Environment hazard band A hazard characteristics. indented the following paragraphs to correctly align as follows:
| 23 November 2021 |
1.2 |
| 28 May 2021 |
1.1 | Replaced references to Categorisation Guidelines in step 4.4 and 5.4 with the details (from the Guidelines) about hazard bands; improvements and more information in 'Before you start categorising your introduction'. Added appendices: acceptable test guidelines for categorisation and in silico predictions for categorisation. | 22 December 2020 |
1 | Original | 1 July 2020 |
Drawing on information in the IC Act, General Rules and the Industrial Chemicals Categorisation Guidelines, this practical step-by-step guide with supporting self-guided decision tools helps you categorise your chemical introduction as listed or exempted or reported or assessed.
In this guide
- An overview of AICIS introduction categories. All introducers must categorise each chemical introduction into one of these categories: listed, exempted, reported, assessed or commercial evaluation.
- Work out if the chemical you're introducing is already on the Inventory and therefore a 'listed introduction'. On this page you can work out if your introduction meets these criteria.
- Some introductions are not eligible for the exempted or reported categories. On this page you can work out if your introduction meets these criteria.
- Certain chemical introductions are considered to be ‘very low risk’ to human health and the environment and are categorised as exempted. On this page you can work out if your introduction meets these criteria.
- Certain chemical introductions are considered to be ‘low risk’ to human health and the environment and are categorised as reported introductions. On this page you can work out if your introduction meets these criteria.
- To be able to finish your categorisation you need to work out the human health risk of your introduction. It could be very low, low, or medium to high.
- To be able to finish your categorisation you need to work out the risks of your introduction to the environment.
- In this step, you can work out your introduction’s category using your introduction's indicative human health risk from step 4.5 and indicative environment risk from step 5.5.
- Information on this page will help you complete steps 4.4 and 5.4 in working out what the human health characteristics and environment hazard characteristics of your introduction are.
- Use information on this page to help you complete steps 4.4 and 5.4 to work out the human health hazard characteristics and environment hazard characteristics of your introduction.
- This accompanies step 5.3 - work out your environment exposure band.
- Work out your health categorisation volume - you may need this to complete step 4.3 (work out your human health exposure band).