Disclosure Threshold
Declare requires the disclosure of all intentionally added ingredients plus residuals at or above 100 ppm. Within Declare, disclosure is defined as public disclosure on the label and in the Declare database of the chemical name, associated CASRN, and the percentage or percentage range by weight for each ingredient, in regards to the finished product. Naturally occurring impurities, and process chemicals do not need to be reported, will not be listed on the label, and will not be used to determine if a product’s Declaration Status.
All Declare labels MUST demonstrate this content disclosure for at least 99% of the total product by weight, with allowance for up to 1% proprietary ingredient withholding. Note: if the Proprietary Ingredients Exception is used, the product cannot contain any Red List chemicals that are not covered by an LBC Temporary Exception as products with a Declaration Status of “Declared” must disclose 100% of ingredients.
Product ingredients that quality for Special CASRN Reporting Requirements may be exempt from reporting CAS Numbers and will still be considered fully disclosed when the special requirements are met.
Ingredient Names
Manufacturers must list the generic name for the components/parts and chemicals reported. Manufacturers may not list the trade name or brand name of supplied components or their ingredients without the expressed written consent of the supplier. The exception to this requirement is a supplier with an active Declare label. Manufacturers may reference the Declare ID for components that have already been disclosed through Declare.
Ingredient Percentages
All ingredients must be reported with a fixed percentage by weight or percentage ranges. If reported using a percentage range, the percentage delta may not exceed 20. For example, Nylon 6 may be listed as present from 14-34%, but not as 25-48% as this exceeds the range of 20. Ingredient ranges may be appropriate in order to accurately represent available product dimensions, multiple raw material suppliers, or slight changes due to multiple manufacturing locations. Ingredient ranges may also be used to mask the exact formulation of a product on the public database listing.
Ranges exceeding a delta of 20 must be justified and have their rationale submitted to declare.support@living-future.org for approval. Examples of approved cases include:
- A manufacturer uses a single label to represent multiple available wood species options for a countertop. Since the wood range represents component options, the range of each wood type represented should each be listed as present from 0-95%.
- A carpet tile contains 60% thread, composed of some percentage of Nylon 6 and Nylon 6,6 which are used interchangeably in the supply chain. Listing both Nylon 6 and Nylon 6,6 as present from 0-60% represents this variability.
Listing Multiple Products
A product family, or multiple products, can be listed on a single Declare label if each of the products has identical content, or the content differences between the products do not exceed 10% of the total mass of the product.
All other information on the Declare label, except final assembly location, must be consistent across all listed products, including Responsible Sourcing and Healthy Interior Performance compliance.
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