Brussels, 8 July 2025--Today, the European Commission presented an Action Plan for the Chemicals Industry to strengthen the competitiveness and modernisation of the EU chemical sector. The Action Plan addresses key challenges, namely high energy costs, unfair global competition, and weak demand, while promoting investment in innovation and sustainability. The Action Plan is accompanied by a simplification omnibus on chemicals – the sixth that the Commission has presented in this mandate so far – to further streamline and simplify key EU chemicals legislation, alongside a proposal to strengthen the governance and financial sustainability of the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA).
The Action Plan proposes the following measures:
Simplification
As part of its ongoing efforts to boost the EU's competitiveness, the Commission adopted a sixth simplification omnibus to reduce compliance costs and administrative burden for the chemical industry while ensuring strong protection of human health and the environment. This includes simplifying hazardous chemical labelling rules, clarifying EU cosmetics regulations, and easing registration for EU fertilising products by aligning information requirements with standard REACH rules for chemicals. These measures are expected to save at least €363 million annually for the industry.
The proposal for the ECHA Basic Regulation equips ECHA with the resources, flexibility, and structural adaptations required to fulfil the duties under its growing mandate, which now includes responsibilities under multiple EU regulations, namely spanning classification and labelling, biocidal products, import and export of hazardous chemicals, waste management and water.
The chemicals sector is vital to Europe's economy, underpinning the manufacture of almost all goods. It provides essential materials and technologies to industries that support the welfare, security and resilience of European economies, including automotive, construction, healthcare, agriculture, clean technologies and defence.
Background
The European Chemicals Industry Action Plan builds on the Competitiveness Compass and Clean Industrial Deal. Following the President's Strategic Dialogue on 12 May 2025, it is the Commission's third sector plan after automotive and steel. The simplification package presented today delivers on President von der Leyen's commitment to simplify EU laws and cut administrative burdens, helping businesses innovate and grow. President von der Leyen announced a sector-specific omnibus in the first Strategic Dialogue on the future of the Chemical Industry in Europe with representatives of the sector, held on 12 May 2025. The Single Market Strategy adopted in May 2025 reiterated that commitment. The Omnibus for the Chemicals Industry is one of a series of Simplification Omnibus packages presented by the Commission under this mandate. The EU chemical industry is the fourth largest manufacturing sector, with 29,000 companies providing 1.2 million direct jobs and supporting 19 million across supply chains.
Source: European Commission