Latest Developments in EU Risk Regulation:
REACH – Challenges after the Registration Deadline of 1 December 2010


22 February 2011
De Warande Club, Brussels


regular: 585,- Euro
reduced for EJRR-subscribers and Cefic-members: 495,- Euro
reduced for full-time academics: 415,- Euro

VAT added if applicable. Special rates for students available on request.


Overview

The first registration deadline of the REACH regulation has just passed: Substances in high quantities and CMR substances had to be registered by 1 December 2010 - two more will follow until 2018.
At this conference, the second in the field of law which is covered by our European Journal of Risk Regulation (EJRR), participants and speakers evaluated and discussed the impacts and challenges of this registration deadline for the chemical industry.
At the beginning of the conference the actual situation after December was closely looked at from different points of view with seven speakers from various backgrounds informing the audience about their experiences. At the end the speakers concentrated on a possible revision (panel discussion with all speakers).


Target Group
 

This EJRR Conference on REACH mainly targeted members of the legal departments of the chemical industry and downstream users as well as lawyers with a focus on chemical law.


Benefits of Attending

- Hear top-level experts exchange their views about the challenges of REACH after
  the registration deadline of December 1!

- Get updated on the latest developments of the regulation! 

- Meet professionals from all over Europe and enjoy a great networking opportunity
  just a stone's throw away from Brussel's European Quarter!


 

EJRR
Journal
Publication frequency: quarterly
Subscription: € 367,-
ISSN 18 67-29 9X


Further information

EStAL
Journal
Publication frequency: quarterly
Subscription: € 442,-
ISSN 16 19-52 72

Further information

Reading of Intimate Brussels - Living amongst Eurocrats

30 March 2011, 18.30 pm @ European Parliament

For one year, Martin Leidenfrost explored Europe’s capital and wrote fifty personal – tender, alienated, mischievous – portraits.

“Entertaining, amusing, insightful.” The Gap