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Please be aware that this old REACH registration data factsheet is no longer maintained; it remains frozen as of 19th May 2023.

The new ECHA CHEM database has been released by ECHA, and it now contains all REACH registration data. There are more details on the transition of ECHA's published data to ECHA CHEM here.

Diss Factsheets

Classification & Labelling & PBT assessment

PBT assessment

Administrative data

PBT assessment: overall result

Referenceopen allclose all

Name:
Spiroglycol
Type of composition:
boundary composition of the substance
State / form:
solid: bulk
Reference substance:
Spiroglycol
Name:
Spiroglycol
Type of composition:
legal entity composition of the substance
State / form:
solid: bulk
Reference substance:
Spiroglycol
PBT status:
the substance is not PBT / vPvB
Justification:

The ECHA guidance document R.11 gives the criteria to be used in the assessment of PBT and vPvB properties. These include also screening criteria for the assessment of persistence and bioaccumulation potential.

A substance is considered as persistent in the environment if its half-life in fresh or estuarine water is greater than 40 days, or in marine water is greater than 60 days, or in fresh sediment, estuarine sediment or soil is greater than 120 days or in marine sediment is greater than 180 days. A screening criterion has been established for the assessment of the persistence of a substance in the environment, which is that the substance must not fulfil the criterion for ready biodegradability in a valid screening test. According to ECHA guidance document R.11, a substance which is classified as readily biodegradable on the basis of a screening test (fulfilling or not fulfilling the 10-day window) is not fulfilling the criteria for persistence.

A substance is considered as bioaccumulative if the bioconcentration factor is greater than 2000 L/kg. A screening criterion has been established for the assessment of the bioaccumulation potential of a substance, which is a log Kow greater than 4.5. According to ECHA guidance document R.11, for organic substances with a log Kow value below 4.5 it is assumed that its bioconcentration factor, i.e. its affinity to partition into the lipids of organisms, is below 2000 L/kg.

A substance is considered as toxic if the long-term NOEC for marine or freshwater organisms is less than 0.01 mg/L, the substance is classified as carcinogenic, mutagenic or toxic for reproduction, or there is evidence of chronic toxicity, as identified by the classifications T, R48 or Xn, R48 according to Directive 67/548/EEC. A screening criterion for environmental toxicity has been established for substances, for which long-term tests are lacking. According to ECHA guidance document R.11, a substance is considered to potentially meet the criteria for toxicity when an acute E(L)C50 value from a standard toxicity test is less than 0.1 mg/L.

Persistence Assessment

The substance was found to be inherently biodegradable in a screening test on ready biodegradability and is therefore not fulfilling the P-criteria.

Bioaccumulation Assessment

As the log Kow of the substance is 1.63, the substance is likely to have a BCF below 2000 kg/L. The substance is therefore not fulfilling the B-criteria.

Toxicity Assessment

None of the available standard toxicity tests in fish, daphnids or algae resulted in E(L)C50 values of less than 0.1 mg/L. The substance is not mutagenic or toxic for reproduction. Finally, the substance is not classified for chronic toxicity. The substance is therefore not fulfilling the T criteria.

Summary and overall Conclusions on PBT or vPvB Properties

The substance is not fulfilling the PBT or vPvB-criteria .

Likely routes of exposure:

The substance has been found to be inherently biodegradable. However, a low Log Pow in combination with incineration as the method of waste disposal, any environmental exposure is envisaged to be negligable and dispersed.