Authorisation of biocidal products

Biocidal products sold and used in Finland require authorisation by Tukes. During the transitional period of the Biocidal Products Regulation some products are excluded from the authorisation procedures.

The following biocidal products must be authorised by Tukes:

  • A product marketed and used in Finland with an active substance that is about to be approved within the EU or which is already approved
  • A product might need an approval according to the Chemicals Act prior to making it available in the market if the active substance is not yet approved in the EU’s review programme. These products are
    • some insecticides and insect repellents,
    • wood preservatives containing polymeric betaine,
    • some slimicides used in the paper industry, and
    • antifouling products containing zinc pyrithione.

The status of active substance reviews can be checked from the European Chemicals Agency’s (ECHA) website by using the search field for biocidal active substances

 

Applicable authorisations for biocidal products 

National authorisation

National authorisation grants companies permission to sell a biocidal product in that EU country from which the authorisation is sought. The application and related annex material is submitted via the R4BP 3  application.

If the authorisation is sought in Finland, Tukes reviews the product in accordance with the Biocidal Products Regulation. Tukes grants authorisations only for Finland.

If the active substance is a candidate for substitution, Tukes completes a comparative assessment and checks the availability of another authorised biocidal product or a non-chemical method that presents a significantly lower overall risk to human and animal health and the environment.

Tukes will ban or place use restrictions on a product for which national authorisation is sought if there is another sufficiently effective and already authorised product that does not cause other significant economic or practical disadvantages and that does not promote resistance in the organism in question.

Union authorisation

Union authorisation for products in certain product type categories is an EU-wide authorisation that the EU grants for products with similar conditions of use across the EU. Application is preceded by an advance application aimed at assessing the similarity of conditions of use within the EU.

Union authorisation is not granted

  • for product types 14, 15, 17, 20 and 21, or
  • if the product contains active substances, such as substances in CMR categories 1A and 1B, which meet the exclusion criteria.

Mutual recognition in parallel

Mutual recognition in parallel is an authorisation with which a company can market its products also in another EU country in addition to the country from which national authorisation was applied for.  A company can apply for mutual recognition in parallel at the same time as applying for national authorisation.

The application is submitted via the R4BP 3  application.

Mutual recognition enables the processing of authorisations simultaneously in different member states. Once the countries have reached an agreement on the approval criteria, the products can be authorised at the same time in all of the countries where the authorisation has been applied.

Mutual recognition in sequence

Mutual recognition in sequence is possible if a company already has a national authorisation in one member state but wishes to market its products also in other EU countries. The company can apply for mutual recognition of the national authorisation in sequence in those EU countries where the product has not yet been authorised.

The application is submitted via the R4BP 3  application. 

Authorisation of the same biocidal product

Authorisation of the same biocidal product can be applied for under the following conditions:

  • if an identical product has already been mutually recognised in Finland.
  • if the product is identical with another product that belongs to the same product family or has already been granted a separate product authorisation or Union authorisation.

The authorisation can be applied for via the R4BP 3  application, and the applicant can be either a company that has received mutual recognition or another company. Authorisation requires a Letter of Access granting access to the product data used in previous reviews (EU 414/2013 and Amendment 1802/2016).

Simplified authorisation procedure

Authorisation in accordance with the simplified authorisation procedure can be applied for for products that contain active substances listed in Annex I of the Biocidal Products Regulation and that meet the criteria set out in Article 25 of the Biocidal Products Regulation.

If the criteria are not met, for example regarding the use of personal protective equipment, regular national authorisation of the product must be applied for. Authorisation according to the simplified authorisation procedure is applied for from one EU country. When the product has been approved, the company can submit a notification to other EU countries of commencing marketing activities via the R4BP 3 application. Once the notification has been submitted, the company can market its product in other EU countries.

Changes of authorisations

Changes of authorisations for approved products in accordance with the Biocidal Products Regulation are divided into three types:

  1. Administrative change means an amendment of an existing authorisation of a purely administrative nature involving no change to the properties or efficacy of the biocidal product or biocidal product family.
  2. Minor change means an amendment of an existing authorisation that is not of a purely administrative nature and requires only a limited re-assessment of the properties or efficacy of the biocidal product or biocidal product family.
  3. Major change means an amendment involving any changes other than an administrative change or minor change.

A separate implementing regulation on changes of authorisations  has been published, and various changes are classified in detail in Annex I. If the amendment in question is not found in Annex I, the company must apply for amendment classification from the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) with R4BP 3 application.

Authorisation under the Chemicals Act is granted for products whose active substance has not yet been approved in the EU. Product authorisations can be amended based on separate applications.

 

Can more than one product be included in the same application?

Similar products may be authorised as a product family under certain conditions. A biocidal product family refers to a group of biocidal products

  • that are used in the same way
  • whose active substances have the same specifications
  • whose consistency differs in a specified manner, however the differences in consistency must not increase the risk or impair the efficacy of the products.

A biocidal product family is divided into subgroups, and the classification, hazard and precautionary statements for each product within the subgroup are the same. An exception is the biocidal product family of a concentrate for professional use and ready-for-use products obtained through dilution of that concentrate.

A company can include new products in an approved product family via a notification, and the consistency of these products can vary within the limits of the products in the approved product family.

A company can include new products in an approved product family also without a notification if the products differ from the approved products only in pigment, scent or colouring.

 

Who can apply for authorisations?

The manufacturer or marketer of the product can apply for authorisation. Also a consultant can apply for authorisation for another company. The authorisation holder must be from the European Union, Norway or Switzerland.

 

How do you apply for authorisation?

Authorisations in accordance with the Biocidal Products Regulation are applied for via the ECHA’s Register for Biocidal Products R4BP 3. The company must have an ECHA account in order to use the register. If the application is submitted by a consultant on behalf of the company, the consultant must also have necessary login details and access to the company’s information. Please see ECHA Practical Guides for more information.

Both the applications and granted authorisations are managed via the R4BP 3 application. Any communication with the authority relating to the application process also takes place via this register.

If you are planning to submit a national authorisation application to Finland as a reference member state, please contact Tukes at least one year before the application.

If you want to request Tukes to act as a reference member state for the evaluation of a national or Union authorisation or as an evaluating member state for the approval of an active substance, send a completed Request for Finland to act as refMSCA -form to Tukes asking Tukes to act as a reference member state or an evaluating member state. 

Authorisations under the Chemicals Act are applied for directly from Tukes. Further information on how to apply and application forms can be requested by e-mail from biosinfo @ tukes.fi. Send confidential or otherwise sensitive documents to Tukes in the security message service (Turvaviesti). (Change language in the right top corner: Suomeksi > In English.)

 

Which attachments are needed when applying for biocidal product authorisation?

Information requirements for a national authorisation are listed in Annex II and III to the Biocidal Products Regulation. The required material needs to be compiled as a single file using the IUCLID software, and the IUCLID file then attached to the application sent via R4BP 3.

Required attachments when applying for mutual recognition:

  • summary of product characteristics (SPC) in Finnish
  • label in Finnish and Swedish
  • safety data sheets in Finnish and Swedish
  • Letter of Access to active substance and product material
  • when applying for mutual recognition in sequence, the application must also include the product review report (if not already in the R4BP 3 register) and the authorisation decision of the national authorisation translated into English (if in another language in R4BP 3).

Authorisation under the Chemicals Act

Information requirements for applications under the Chemicals Act are listed in Ministry of the Environment Decree 419/2014.

 

How long does it take to get authorisation?

The national authorisation procedure takes around 18 months. Mutual recognition in parallel also takes about 18 months because the application is processed in parallel with an application for a national authorisation that is being reviewed in another member state. Mutual recognition in sequence takes about 6 months if the reference product has already been approved in another member state. Processing amendments takes about 3–12 months, depending on the type of amendment.

Processing authorisations under the Chemicals Act take about a year from completion of the application. Processing amendments take about 2–6 months depending on the range of the amendment.

 

How much do the authorisations cost and when are they invoiced?

Authorisation fees are given in our fees for biocidal product application webpage. Fees for product families are doubled.

In applications under the Biocidal Products Regulation, failure to pay the fee in time results in refusal of the application. The applicant should include valid invoicing details in the application.

When the application has arrived, a standard fee is charged. In addition, a possible comparative assessment is charged if the product contains an active substance that is a candidate for substitution. If processing of the application takes more time than usual, excess hours are charged later in accordance with the Fees Regulation in one or several parts, at the latest after the authorisation procedure has been finalized. However, the total amount cannot exceed the maximum price set in the price list for the fee in question.

For some types of application, the applicant is also charged by the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA). In certain cases, the ECHA grants discounted fees  for small and medium sized companies. This requires an advance application to the ECHA for small or medium sized company status, i.e. SME verification, in due time before submitting the actual (product) application. The status is applied for through R4BP with the form SM-APP. The ECHA grants the status for a determined period. The ECHA does not grant discounted fees retrospectively.

For invoicing, Tukes needs the following information

  • name of the invoiced company
  • address
  • VAT number
  • name of the contact person included in the invoice
  • purchase order number, if the company requires this information to be added to the invoice.

Some fees under the Chemicals Act are charged in advance. These include authorisation applications, renewals of authorisations and amendments that require major review.

 

How long is the authorisation valid for?

Authorisations for biocidal products are generally valid for 10 years.

The expiry date for authorisations under mutual recognition is the same as for the product approved with a national authorisation in another member state.

If the product contains an active substance that is a candidate for substitution, the authorisation is valid for 4–5 years.

Renewal of an authorisation must be applied for at least 550 days before its expiry date, irrespective of the length of validity of the original authorisation.

Products authorised under the Chemicals Act are currently authorised until the end of the transitional period of the Biocide Products Regulation, 31 December 2030. If an approval date under the BPR is known for one or more active substances in the product, the authorisation is valid until that date. If an authorisation under the Regulation is applied for the product by the set date, the authorisation will remain valid until an authorisation decision under the BPR has been made for the product.

 

Which products are already approved in Finland?

Biocidal products authorised for use in Finland under Finnish Chemicals Act or under the biocides regulations are listed in the Biocidal products register (in Finnish) which is a part of Kemidigi system.

Biocidal products can also be authorised under Union Authorisation. These products are only listed in ECHA's biocidal products register.

 

What else should be considered?

Approved suppliers of active substances used in biocidal products are listed in the list of active substances and suppliers, the so-called Art 95 list. The product's active substances must be purchased from the companies mentioned in the list.

For information on other obligations, see Other obligations concerning biocidal products.

 

Can the products be tested?

Biocidal products can be tested before the company submits the actual authorisation application. If the tests can cause emissions to the environment, authorities must be notified of the testing prior to commencing. The company must include information in the notification in accordance with Article 56 (2) of the Biocidal Products Regulation.

The notification of the testing is submitted via the R4BP 3 application. The notification must be submitted at least 45 days prior to commencing the test.