https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK2105/S00281/new-classification-system-for-hazardous-substances.htm
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New Classification System For Hazardous Substances |
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On 30 April 2021, New Zealand adopted a new classification system for hazardous substances under the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996 (HSNO). This new system is the Globally Harmonised System (GHS).
The GHS is an international hazard classification system for chemicals created by the United Nations. The hazards are communicated on labels and safety data sheets including how to safely store, use and dispose of chemicals.
The GHS is used by more than 50 countries, including all of New Zealand’s major trading partners.
Importers, manufacturers and suppliers have four years to update labelling, safety data sheets and packaging for hazardous substances.
There is no change to the classification system used under the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 (HSWA).
Regulations under HSWA will continue to refer to the current HSNO classification system. This means that there is no change to the workplace requirements for hazardous substances under:
WorkSafe’s guidance and approved codes of practice continue to refer to the current HSNO system.
WorkSafe’s Hazardous Substances Calculator refers to both systems. If you have information about the GHS classification of your substance, you can enter it into the Calculator to find out the controls under HSWA that apply to it.
Because the current HSNO system and the new GHS system coexist, the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) has created a correlation table that shows the equivalent GHS classifications to the current HSNO classifications.
Read the EPA Labelling, Safety Data Sheet and Packaging Notices
More information, including the new approval documents, can be found at the following pages:
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