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IHMM Today is an online publication of the Institute of Hazardous Materials Management® (IHMM®).
Other than content specifically provided by IHMM, articles contained in IHMM Today are compiled from
independent sources and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of IHMM.
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Table of Contents
- Lion
- DGI
- Certifications Matter – CHMM
- The Value of IHMM Credentials
- ISSM
- EHS IHMM Safety Credentials
- Hazmat/Dangerous Goods Credentials
- Microcredentials/Emeritus/BadgeCert
- Follow IHMM on Social Media
- IHMM Credentials Accredited
- Need Help?
- IHMM Recent News
- Inside IHMM
- 2026 IHMM Trade Shows and Conferences
- Free Webinar – ISO 45001
- Professional Development
- Support the Future of EHS
- IHMM Foundation Jobs Board
- Research Resources for You
- IHMM’s Unprecedented Outreach – 8.9 million
- Advertise with IHMM
- IHMM Salary Survey
- Connect – Collaborate – Get Hired
- Sean Grady, CHMM – Environmental Transformation Podcast
- IHMM Recertification Videos
- Upholding Integrity – IHMM Code of Ethics Video
- IHMM Mentors Support You
- IHMM Government Affairs
- CHEMTREC
- Regulatory Updates
- NPDES Stormwater Webinar
- 3 Issues This Week
- Important Stories for IHMM Certificants
- Environment News This Week
- Workplace Safety News This Week
- IHMM a Premier Partner – Falls 2026
- Global Dangerous Goods Transportation This Week
- School Safety – Support Opportunities
- ECHA – News from the European Chemicals Agency
- Lion
- IHMM Store
- News from IHMM Affiliates
- AHMP
- AIHA
- NSC
- Advertise with IHMM
- ASSP
- The Certified Professional Coming
- IHMM Hazardous Materials Textbook
- NAHMMA

Certified Hazardous Materials Manager® (CHMM®)
Stand out as a top-tier environmental professional with the Certified Hazardous Materials Manager® (CHMM®) credential from IHMM. Recognized under EPA regulation 40 CFR §312.10, the CHMM® proves your expertise, professionalism, and dedication to protecting people and the planet.
Corporations, universities, and government agencies rely on credentials like the CHMM® to identify leaders who stay ahead of complex environmental laws and regulations. Earning this credential shows you’re not just qualified—you’re committed to continuous growth and excellence in hazardous materials management.
Add CHMM® to your name and become the expert employers seek, the leader teams trust, and the professional who makes a difference.
Be recognized. Be respected. Be a CHMM®.
The Value of IHMM Credentials
Below you will see the credential badges from BadgeCert that are now in each CHMM, CHMP, CDGT, CDGP, AHMM, Student CHMM, CSHM, CSMP, CSSM, ASHM, and Student ASHM certificant’s MYIHMM account. Every IHMM certificant may use these badges, linked as those below are to their IHMM credential page, for their email signatures, business cards, and other social media applications. You’re justifiably proud of the accomplishment of having earned your credential, and you can show the rest of the world.
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IHMM Credentials Accredited By

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Need Help? On the IHMM website, just click on the “NEED HELP?” button
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IHMM RECENT NEWS
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS/DANGEROUS GOODS
“What to Expect in Chemicals Policy and Regulation and on Capitol Hill in 2026,” January 27, 2026, 11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. (EST), via webinar
EPA to remove 4 million pounds of abandoned electronic material from Arizona warehouse
PFAS levels are declining in Great Lakes fish, new research shows
Microplastics Are Undermining the Ocean’s Power to Absorb Carbon
Updating the Water Quality Certification Regulations
New Source Performance Standards Review for Stationary Combustion Turbines and Stationary Gas Turbines
Technical Amendments to the EPCRA Hazardous Chemical Inventory Reporting Requirements To Conform to the 2024 OSHA Hazard Communication Standard; Withdrawal
Chemical Regulatory Policy in a Period of Political Attrition
PHMSA Issues Final Rule Allowing Integrity Management Alternative for Class Location Changes
EPA Completes Risk Evaluation for Five Phthalates, Intends to Regulate “Dozens” of COUs
Deadline for Filing Annual Pesticide Production Reports — March 1, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court Weighs In on a Landmark Case Against the Oil Industry
White House Review Signals Final Stages of EPA’s Recission of Obama-era Greenhouse Gas Endangerment Finding
EHS/WORKPLACE SAFETY
HHS reinstates all laid-off employees at workplace safety agency NIOSH
[BLOG] Interim Recommendations After Fatal Explosion: US CSB
[BLOG] HazCom Compliance Deadlines for Chemical Industry
[CHEAT SHEET] EPCRA Tier II Reporting Due March 1
[BLOG] Get Ahead of Key EHS Reports Due in 2026
[BLOG] What OSHA Violations Are “Serious”?
NIOSH finds hundreds of fraudulent respirator cartridges for sale online
OSHA gives more time to comply with HazCom changes
Effectively communicating safety and health information: new tip sheet
California heat standard revisions and enforcement prevented deaths: study
Skilled Trades Turn to AI Amid Labor Shortages
Connecticut Joins Multistate Alliance to Strengthen Worker Protection Enforcement
Oregon OSHA Releases New Worker Safety and Rights Guide
House GOP Bill Would Roll Back Key Protections in US Chemical Safety Law
A veteran CT firefighter died in a tragic onsite accident. What OSHA found in its investigation.
IRE 2026 Education Session – How Roofing Contractors Can Handle OSHA Inspections
INSIDE IHMM
IHMM 2026 Trade Shows and Conferences

ASSP Safety 2026 Conference & Expo
Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, CA
June 15-17, 2026

AHMP EHS Hazmat Summit
September 29-October 1, 2026
New Orleans, Louisiana

Dates TBD

Free Webinar – ISO 45001 – Evidence for the effectiveness of occupational health and safety management systems: what do we really know?
We are pleased to invite you to a free webinar – hosted jointly by ISO Technical Committee 283 and the Lloyd’s Register Foundation Global Safety Evidence Centre – bringing together leading international researchers and practitioners to examine the latest evidence on the effectiveness of occupational health and safety (OHS) management systems. The webinar takes place on 29 January 2026 at 13:00 UTC for 90 minutes.
- 08:00 (8:00 AM) Eastern Standard Time (EST) / Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) (UTC-5/UTC-4)
- 07:00 (7:00 AM) Central Standard Time (CST) / Central Daylight Time (CDT) (UTC-6/UTC-5)
- 06:00 (6:00 AM) Mountain Standard Time (MST) / Mountain Daylight Time (MDT) (UTC-7/UTC-6)
- 05:00 (5:00 AM) Pacific Standard Time (PST) / Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) (UTC-8/UTC-7)
With a particular focus on ISO 45001, this event will present findings from major studies, including:
- Do safety management system standards indicate safer operations? Evidence from the OHSAS 18001 occupational health and safety standard (Harvard University and Duke University, USA)
- Differences in occupational health and safety efforts between adopters and non-adopters of certified occupational health and safety management systems (funded by the Danish Work Environment Research Fund, Denmark)
- The effectiveness of accredited certifications for occupational health and safety management systems (Accredia and INAIL, Italy)
Building on existing work from the Global Safety Evidence Centre on the effectiveness of OHS interventions and leading indicators, the discussion will explore whether implementation of an OHS management system based on a recognised standard leads to measurable improvements in workplace safety and health. We will also look at the factors that support effective implementation and consider how research evidence can inform the ongoing development of the ISO 45000 series.
By the end of the webinar, participants will:
- Understand the latest evidence on the effectiveness of OHS management systems, particularly ISO 45001.
- Gain insight into key mechanisms and organisational factors that influence outcomes.
- Consider how evidence can be integrated into standards development.
- Reflect on implications for future revisions within the ISO 45000 series.
This event will be of interest to anyone involved in improving OHS, including practitioners, ISO committee members, auditors and certification professionals, organisational management and leadership, compliance and risk teams, researchers, educators and training providers.
To register, please visit the event page.


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Professional Development

Support the Future of EHS

The IHMM Foundation Jobs Board
We invite our participating companies to post their available employment opportunities here. There is no charge for this service. IHMM Foundation/HMS staff reviews each proposed posting for clarity and completeness before posting to the public view and may remove a posting without notice. Go here to post your available jobs.

Research and Resources For You
The IHMM Foundation/HMS is committed to the continued growth of IHMM’s certificants and to supporting them in every way we can. We achieve this through work that aims to gain insights that align with our mission to educate, develop, inform, and unite the hazardous materials, dangerous goods, and environmental health and safety communities of practice.
IHMM’s certificants will find important resources that most of our certificants use. If you don’t find what you need, use the button below to let us know and we will get it and post it here for you.
If you are you looking for additional resources not listed on this page? We can help!
IHMM Research is found at https://hazmatsociety.org/research/
Added this week >

IHMM’s Unprecedented Outreach: Elevating Excellence Worldwide
2025 marks another milestone moment for IHMM! IHMM has sent 8.9 million messages to thousands of private and public sector entities, amplifying awareness of IHMM, our prestigious credentials, and the dedicated professionals who hold them.
This momentum is more than just numbers; it’s a testament to our unwavering mission. Every day, across 50 states and 85 countries, IHMM champions the critical role of its credentialed professionals, setting standards of excellence in environmental, health, and safety fields. Together, we are shaping the future—one message, one connection, one breakthrough at a time!
8,963,657

IHMM Salary Survey Results
IHMM is pleased to release the survey of salaries underlying the hazardous materials/dangerous goods credentials salaries by job title, as well as the survey of salaries underlying the workplace safety credentials salaries by job title. You may download these surveys as linked below.
IHMM launched its “Open to Work” online COLLABORATION community exclusively for IHMM certificants looking to connect, share resumes, and discover job opportunities together in a supportive environment.
You can find this community after logging into COLLABORATION here: https://community.ihmm.org/home
#1 – Recertification Video
#2 Recertification Video
IHMM Recertification Videos
Congratulations. After hard work and dedication, you earned your professional credential. Now, every 5 years, you will need to recertify your valuable credential. Over 5 years, you need to earn 200 certification maintenance points or CMPs. You receive 100 CMPs for the job you perform, and then need to earn a minimum of another 100 CMPs in a variety of ways, demonstrating your commitment to continuous improvement and remaining current with the demands of your profession and our communities of practice.
Considering everything you did to achieve certification, don’t let it go to waste by failing to recertify.
Upholding Integrity: The Updated IHMM Code of Ethics
At IHMM, integrity isn’t just a principle—it’s the foundation of everything we do. Our Code of Ethics is the guiding standard for all IHMM Certificants, ensuring that professionals in hazardous materials, dangerous goods, environment, health, and safety uphold the highest levels of honor, trust, and responsibility in their work.
By committing to this Code, Certificants reinforce their dedication to excellence, ethical conduct, and public safety. Violating these standards isn’t an option—those who do may face disciplinary action from a peer review panel, including credential suspension or revocation.
We’ve recently updated our Code of Ethics to reflect evolving industry standards and best practices. Stay informed, stay accountable, and continue leading with integrity.
📜 Explore the updated IHMM Code of Ethics here: IHMM Code of Ethics
🎥 Watch the latest Code of Ethics video below!
IHMM Mentors Support

Welcome to the Future of Professional Growth with IHMM’s Mentoring Program!
Are you ready to take your career to the next level? Dive into a world of opportunity and advancement with IHMM’s dynamic mentoring program! Our experienced mentors are here to share their expertise, offer personalized guidance, and help you navigate both credential exams and everyday work challenges.
✨ Unlock Your Potential: Learn from industry leaders and accelerate your professional journey. ✨ Tailored Support: Receive personalized advice and strategies to overcome your unique challenges. ✨ Build Connections: Join a vibrant community of professionals eager to support and inspire each other.
Whether you’re a newcomer in the field or seeking to hone your skills, IHMM’s mentoring program is your gateway to growth and success. Stay tuned for inspiring stories, valuable tips, and exclusive insights from our mentors!
Embark on a journey of discovery and achievement with us. Welcome aboard!
IHMM’s Collaboration platform contains a “Mentor Match” module [see below at right] that allows mentors to signup designating the hours, number of mentees, subject areas, and length of time they wish to mentor – as well as enabling mentees signup requesting assistance in specified areas. The mentor match module does the rest by matching mentors and mentees.


Regulatory Updates
| DateSort ascending | SubjectSortable column | Document TypeSortable column | Part |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01/16/2026 | Hazardous Materials: Notice of Applications for Modification to Special Permits | Notice | |
| 01/16/2026 | Hazardous Materials: Notice of Applications for New Special Permits | Notice | |
| 01/16/2026 | Hazardous Materials: Notice of Actions on Special Permits | Notice | |
| 01/14/2026 | Hazardous Materials: Eliminating Unnecessary Regulatory Burdens on Fuel Transportation | Rule | 107, 171, 172, 173, 178, 180 |
| 01/14/2026 | Pipeline Safety: Class Location Change Requirements | Rule | 192 |

Stormwater Centers of Excellence
January 28, 2026
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time
Stormwater is a significant source of water pollution, threatening the health of waterways nationwide. However, financial and engineering challenges make stormwater difficult for communities to manage. Recognizing this challenge, EPA awarded $5M in grant funding to establish the new Centers of Excellence for Stormwater Control Infrastructure Technologies Grant Program.
Join us to meet the recently established Centers and learn about their research, training, and technical assistance offerings. Plus, explore the National Stormwater Managers’ Clearinghouse designed to share new and emerging stormwater control infrastructure technologies and the Centers’ activities and projects.
Topics
- Cold Climate Center of Excellence for Stormwater Infrastructure Technology (CCCESIT)
- Great Plains Stormwater Center of Excellence
- Southwest Stormwater Center of Excellence
- Coastal Stormwater Center of the Southeast
- National Stormwater Managers’ Clearinghouse
Registration Link:
https://usepa.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/6KfUAb97QzCwnoDvk3U1Ag
For any questions related to this announcement, please contact [email protected].

IHMM Government Affairs – 3 Issues This Week
IHMM has three issues under review this week: one legislative issue in Congress and two regulatory matters. Here is a synopsis of all three.
On January 15, 2026, the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Environment announced it will hold a legislative hearing on January 22, 2026, entitled “Chemicals in Commerce: Legislative Proposal to Modernize America’s Chemical Safety Law, Strengthen Critical Supply Chains, and Grow Domestic Manufacturing.” The hearing will focus on a draft bill titled Discussion Draft of Legislation to Modernize the Toxic Substances Control Act. IHMM Memo on this legislation in the link above.
Important Stories for IHMM Certificants

Environmental News for This Week
During the week of January 12–19, 2026, U.S. environmental policy was defined by major EPA regulatory repositioning with significant Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and Clean Air Act implications.
Most prominently, EPA announced it will stop monetizing public-health benefits (including lives saved and health-care savings) when justifying key air-pollution regulations for PM2.5 and ozone, shifting cost-benefit analysis toward industry compliance costs—an approach expected to generate immediate litigation risk over whether EPA is unlawfully discounting statutory public-health mandates.
On rulemaking, EPA issued a final Clean Air Act rule revising NOx limits for new stationary combustion turbines used in power plants and industrial facilities, with critics alleging the standard is materially weaker than prior proposals.
EPA also launched a significant proposed rule to revise Clean Water Act Section 401 water quality certification requirements—framed as streamlining infrastructure permitting but likely to face challenges from states and environmental groups seeking to preserve certification authority. See > https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/01/15/2026-00754/updating-the-water-quality-certification-regulations?
Practical impact: regulated entities should anticipate increased regulatory uncertainty, heightened federal-state friction, and a litigation-heavy environment affecting permitting, emissions compliance, and water-quality certification strategy.
Biennial Hazardous Waste Report – March 1
Federal regulations require large quantity generators to submit a report every two years regarding the nature, quantities and disposition of hazardous waste generated at their facility. EPA refers to this as the National Biennial RCRA Hazardous Waste Report or Biennial Report.
The Biennial Report form (EPA form 8700-13A/B) must be submitted to the authorized state agency or EPA regional office by March 1 of every even-numbered year (for example, a report due by March 1, 2026, would report activities from calendar year 2025). The form includes information such as:
- Facility’s EPA ID Number.
- Facility’s name and address.
- Quantity and nature of hazardous waste generated.
- Whether the hazardous waste was sent for recycling, treatment, storage, or disposal.

Workplace Safety News This Week
During this week, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration announced a four-month extension of compliance deadlines for its updated Hazard Communication Standard (HCS), delaying initial enforcement dates to allow time for necessary guidance and stakeholder preparation—an important development for chemical manufacturers, distributors, and employers subject to the revised standard. See > https://www.osha.gov/quicktakes/01152026
In enforcement news, OSHA is actively investigating recent fatal workplace incidents, including the death of an employee at Abbyland Foods after a fall into a dip tank, underscoring the continued federal focus on fatality investigations and hazard prevention.
On the Department of Labor front, Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s agency continues broader workforce initiatives, including strategic partnerships to enhance worker safety on large infrastructure projects like the Cemetery Brook Drain Tunnel, and a multistate worker protection alliance aimed at strengthening enforcement and information sharing among labor agencies.
Taken together, these developments reflect OSHA’s regulatory implementation adjustments, sustained investigative activity in response to workplace fatalities, and ongoing intergovernmental collaborations to bolster labor law enforcement and worker protections in 2026.

IHMM is a Premier Partner of the Falls 2026 Campaign
May 4-8, 2026
What is a Safety Stand-Down?
A Safety Stand-Down is a voluntary event for employers to talk directly to employees about safety. Any workplace can hold a stand-down by taking a break to focus on “Fall Hazards” and reinforcing the importance of “Fall Prevention”. Employers of companies not exposed to fall hazards can also use this opportunity to have a conversation with employees about the other job hazards they face, protective methods, and the company’s safety policies and goals. It can also be an opportunity for employees to talk to management about falls and other job hazards they see.
In the coming weeks, IHMM will be making materials available for the Falls 2026 Campaign! In addition, IHMM is looking for 2 volunteers, each from a different construction company, who can tell a great story about how they prevent falls in construction.

Global DG Transport Regulatory Update This Week
IHMM Global DG Transport Compliance Matrix (2025–2026)
IHMM Certificant Compliance Checklist
Week of January 19, 2026
Executive Overview
The week of January 19, 2026 sits squarely in the post-effective-date enforcement phase of the global DG regulatory cycle. With ADR 2025 fully operative, IMDG Code Amendment 42-24 mandatory worldwide, and ICAO Technical Instructions / IATA DGR 2026 in force, regulators are prioritizing implementation discipline, enforcement consistency, and alignment with UN Model Regulations rather than introducing new treaty text.
Across regions, the dominant risk drivers this week are enforcement posture, carrier acceptance standards, and documentation accuracy, particularly for battery technologies (lithium-ion and sodium-ion), hazardous waste, pressure receptacles, and undeclared DG in parcel/e-commerce channels.
II. North America
- United States — PHMSA Enforcement Continues to Set the Effective Standard
A. PHMSA Field Operations Emphasize High-Risk Categories
No amendments to 49 C.F.R. Parts 171–180 were published during the week. Nonetheless, PHMSA’s data-driven inspection and enforcement framework—rolled out in late 2025—continues to shape compliance expectations in practice. Field activity during this week reflects sustained attention to:
Lithium-ion and sodium-ion batteries, including battery-powered equipment and vehicles;
Pressure receptacles (cylinder manufacture, requalification, and testing);
Undeclared or misdeclared hazardous materials, particularly in parcel, courier, and e-commerce shipments; and
Repeat violators, identified through historical inspection and incident data.
Legal Significance
From a legal perspective, PHMSA’s posture underscores that enforcement policy can function as de facto regulation. Although the Hazardous Materials Regulations remain unchanged textually, regulated parties—especially exporters—are increasingly expected to demonstrate functional equivalence with UN Model Regulations and ADR-aligned practices in classification, packaging, documentation, and training. Failure to do so elevates exposure to enforcement action, contractual disputes, and insurance challenges.
- Canada – Public Consultation – New Editions of CSA B620, CSA B621, and CSA B622
The Canadian Standards Association (CSA) has released the drafts of the update to safety standards CSA B620, CSA B621, and CSA B622 for a 60-day consultation period, which will close on January 27, 2026. Once the safety standards have been finalized and published, a notice will be issued specifying the coming into force date of the updated standards. All CSA public review drafts are reviewed online and comments from the public to improve the standard can be posted online. The drafts cannot be downloaded but may be accessed from the CSA Group website via the links included belo,w with a summary of some of the proposed changes (note that you must be located in Canada in order to access the links).
CSA B620 (Draft B620) sets out the requirements for the design, manufacture, assembly, modification, inspection, testing and repair of highway and TC portable tanks. The standard also prescribes registration requirements by Transport Canada (TC) of facilities, training organizations, design engineers and design review agencies for conducting the activities within the scope of the standard.
- Expanded and clarified definitions (Clause 3.2);
- Updated requirements for lightweight appurtenances, including pad size, weld requirements (Clause 5.1.4);
- Introduction of clearer requirements for marking inlets/outlets with “liquid” “vapour” (Clause 5.2.2.9);
- Updated gauge calibration and digital gauge selection requirements (Clause 7.1.4);
- Clarified requirements for reclosing pressure relief device testing or replacement (Clause 7.2.7.6);
- Improved requirements for tests and inspections following repairs (Clause 7.5.8); and
- Established qualification requirements for training instructors, including trainee supervision (Clauses 8.1.7.5 & 8.1.7.6).
CSA B621 (Draft B621) sets out the selection and use requirements for highway and TC portable tanks transporting dangerous goods of Class 3, 4, 5, 6.1, 8, and 9.
- Recognition of compatibility information from the tank or composite material manufacturer for FRP tanks (Clause 4.3);
- Clarified requirements for tests and inspections of tanks involved in an accident (Clause 7.1 c));
- Strengthened requirements for automatic engine air intake shut-off devices, including installation, maintenance, and testing (Clause 7.1 j));
- Addition of methanol (UN1230) to the dangerous goods selection and use table for easier identification (Table 3); and
- Introduction of requirements to reinstall parts removed during loading/unloading before transport (Clauses 7.4 d) and 7.7 c)).
CSA B622 (Draft B622) sets out the selection and use requirements for highway and TC portable tanks transporting dangerous goods of Class 2.
- Removal of outdated references to ton containers (Clause 4);
- Clarified requirements for tests and inspections of tanks involved in an accident (Clause 5.1 c));
- Strengthened requirements for automatic engine air intake shut-off devices, including installation, maintenance, and testing (Clause 5.1 i));
- Introduction of requirements to reinstall parts removed during loading/unloading before transport (Clauses 5.4 f) and 5.7 c));
- Improved visibility of monthly test of off-truck emergency shutdown systems (Clause 5.5.3 and Annex A); and
- Clarified requirements for parts in contact with ammonia liquid or vapour (Clause 6.3).
III. Europe — ADR 2025 Fully Settled; ADR 2027 Preparatory Work Advances
A. ADR 2025 Compliance Normalization
By late January 2026, ADR 2025 is a settled baseline across Contracting Parties. During the week of January 19, European authorities continued routine inspections and issued operational clarifications concerning:
Correct application of new battery-related UN entries, including sodium-ion batteries;
Revised requirements for hazardous waste and asbestos transport;
Vehicle and equipment standards under ADR Part 9, particularly for alternative propulsion systems; and
Ongoing validity and recognition of ADR driver training certificates under Chapter 8.2.
B. Forward Look to ADR 2027
Within the UNECE Working Party on the Transport of Dangerous Goods (WP.15), informal preparatory work continues for ADR 2027, with emerging focus on:
DG carriage by battery-electric and hybrid heavy vehicles;
Regulation of reverse logistics and returned DG;
Potential refinement of limited quantity (LQ) provisions; and
Enhanced treatment of undeclared DG in parcel and e-commerce distribution networks.
C. EU Council
European Council signs off postponing rules on classification, labelling, and packaging of chemicals to 2028. The EU Council has approved postponing key provisions of the 2024 revised classification, labelling, and packaging (CLP) regulation for chemicals until 1 January 2028. This “stop-the-clock” measure, part of the Commission’s Omnibus VI package, aims to give businesses, especially SMEs, more time and legal certainty to comply with requirements on relabelling, mandatory formatting, advertising, online sales, and fuel pump labelling. Denmark’s European Affairs Minister Marie Bjerre emphasized that the delay supports competitiveness while maintaining high safety standards. The law will be published in the EU Official Journal soon and enter into force 20 days later. (November 25, 2025 – Council of the EU)
Legal Significance
For European operators and international shippers, the compliance message is clear: ADR 2025 tolerance periods have ended. Contracts, SOPs, and training programs should incorporate change-management provisions anticipating additional tightening in ADR 2027, particularly for batteries and consumer-distribution channels.
IV. Asia — Mandatory Global Codes Drive Compliance Despite Legislative Quiet
A. Limited National Rulemaking
No major DG transport statutes or regulations were promulgated in key Asian jurisdictions during the week of January 19.
B. Mandatory Application of Global Instruments
Operationally, however, the compliance environment has materially shifted because:
IMDG Code Amendment 42-24 is now mandatory worldwide;
ICAO Technical Instructions / IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations 2026 are fully operative for air transport; and
Ocean carriers and ports are enforcing UN-aligned battery, waste, and documentation requirements without transitional leniency.
Legal Significance
In Asia, carrier and port acceptance criteria effectively define compliance. From a legal-risk standpoint, UN- and ADR-aligned classification, packaging, labeling, and documentation now constitute the minimum standard of care, even where domestic legislation has not yet been updated.
V. Africa — Enforcement-Led Convergence with UN and ADR Norms
A. No New DG Legislation Enacted
No African jurisdiction enacted a significant DG-specific statute during the week of January 19.
B. Practical Alignment Through Trade and Inspection
Nevertheless, African ports, customs authorities, and transport operators continue to tighten controls by:
Requiring DG documentation consistent with UN classification and numbering;
Applying IMDG 42-24 standards for maritime shipments; and
Subjecting battery and hazardous-waste consignments to increased scrutiny.
Legal Significance
For multinational operators, Africa exemplifies a broader trend: practice is converging toward UN/ADR standards ahead of formal legislation. Compliance failures increasingly manifest as shipment delays or refusals rather than formal citations, but the commercial and liability impacts can be significant.
VI. Central & South America — MERCOSUR Stability, National Enforcement Takes Precedence
A. Regional Framework Remains Unchanged
At the regional level, no new MERCOSUR DG decisions were adopted during the week. The governing instrument remains the MERCOSUR Agreement on the Land Transport of Dangerous Goods, as modernized by CMC Decision 15/2019, which is expressly tied to the UN Model Regulations.
B. National Enforcement and Interpretation Intensify
More consequential are national-level developments observed across the region:
Argentina continues intensified inspections of battery-powered equipment and vehicles under its UN-aligned implementation regime;
Brazil applies clarified guidance under ANTT Resolution 5.998/2022 for sodium-ion batteries and updated UN entries; and
Colombia maintains active enforcement of its dangerous-goods transport registry, imposing reporting and traceability obligations.
Legal Significance
While MERCOSUR provides a harmonized technical baseline, compliance exposure is increasingly national and enforcement-driven. Shippers must ensure alignment with each country’s implementing measures, inspection practices, and reporting systems, not merely the regional agreement.
VII. Overall Legal Assessment
For the week of January 19, 2026, global DG regulation is characterized by:
Enforcement-led evolution without new statutory text (United States, South America);
Full operational consolidation of ADR 2025 (Europe);
Mandatory application of IMDG 42-24 and ICAO/IATA 2026 (Asia and globally); and
Rising reliance on UN/ADR standards as the de facto global benchmark (Africa and emerging markets).
Across all regions, battery technologies, hazardous waste, pressure receptacles, and undeclared DG remain the principal regulatory pressure points.

Support Opportunity
School districts are invited to join the Safe Communities Safe Schools (SCSS) National Implementation Project, led by the Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence (CSPV) at the University of Colorado Boulder and funded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance. Through this partnership, districts will work with CSPV to strengthen their school safety action planning and implementation. Apply by 1/23/26.
_______
External Opportunities
1/21/26 – Enhancing School Safety Using Behavioral Threat Assessment
Hosted by the U.S. Secret Service
2/18/26 – Preventing Mass Attacks in Our Communities
Hosted by the U.S. Secret Service
3/18/26 – Enhancing School Safety Using Behavioral Threat Assessment
Hosted by the U.S. Secret Service
4/15/26 – Preventing Mass Attacks in Our Communities
Hosted by the U.S. Secret Service
5/20/26 – Enhancing School Safety Using Behavioral Threat Assessment
Hosted by the U.S. Secret Service

Recent News from the European Chemicals Agency
- Have your say in our consultations
- New intention, proposals and withdrawal to harmonise classification and labelling
- Reminder: Call for evidence on restriction preparation for aromatic brominated flame retardants
- ECHA and EFSA to review environmental behaviour of TFA from biocides and pesticides
- ECHA CHEM freeze over
News from IHMM Affiliates

Alliance of Hazardous Materials Professionals
IHMM is affiliated with AHMP and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.
AHMP News
- Congratulations to the 2026 AHMP Executive Committee:
- Chair – Jennifer Koenig, CHMM
- Vice Chair – Vincent Ricevuto, PE, CHMM, REM, CSP, PMP
- Treasurer – Dave Rice, CHMM
- Secretary – Jan Marnicki, CHMM, LMT
- 2026 EHS HAZMAT Summit, September 29 – October 1 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
- Exhibit booths and sponsorship opportunities are open: Learn more
- Call for Abstracts is open! Join us as a presenter in 2026
AHMP Webinars
- Join us on January 22 at 3:30 pm Eastern for a Webinar: Rechargeable Lithium Ion Batteries– Most rechargeable batteries are safe—but some pose hidden risks. This webinar, presented by Ben Hissam, covers how to identify batteries that may fail, catch fire, or explode; the types of rechargeable batteries on the market; and how thermal runaway occurs. The presentation focuses on e-mobility devices and common home and workplace items, and includes tips for protecting yourself and avoiding hazards from improper disposal. Learn More & Register
The Synergist
Most-Read OEHS News Stories of 2025
By Abby Roberts
With the arrival of 2026, Synergist staff are reflecting on the leading occupational and environmental health and safety news stories of 2025. The past year was eventful for OEHS, with major outlets such as NBC, CBS, NPR, and AP covering stories related to Los Angeles wildfire cleanup, NIOSH staffing cuts, an outbreak of Legionnaire’s disease in New York City, and more. Top headlines even looked back to ancient history, with Smithsonian Magazine reporting that environmental lead exposures may have caused widespread health effects in the Roman Empire.

National Safety Council
IHMM is a member of the National Safety Council and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.
NSC News
- Effectively communicating safety and health information: new tip sheet
- California heat standard revisions and enforcement prevented deaths: study
- Bill would shield stone slab manufacturers if workers get silicosis
- FMCSA wants to lengthen time limit for emergency-related HOS exemptions
- OSHA gives more time to comply with HazCom changes
- NIOSH finds hundreds of fraudulent respirator cartridges for sale online
NSC Webinars
- Jan 28 – Safety Inspections – ASC Virtual One-Day Course : 01/28/26 Session
- Jan 29 – Team Safety – ASC Virtual One-Day Course : 1/29/26 Session
- Jan 29 – The HazCom Compliance Clock is Ticking! Here’s How to Meet Updated Requirements
- Feb 5 – What You Need to Know About OSHA Reporting
- Feb 12 – Behavioral Hand Safety: How nudge theory helps reduce hand injuries
- Feb 16-19 – Safety Training Methods – ASC Virtual 4-Day Course : 02/16/26 – 02/19/26 Session
- Feb 23-27 – Fundamentals of Industrial Hygiene – ASC Virtual 5-Day course : 02/23/26 – 02/27/26 Session
- Feb 26 – Safety Inspections – ASC Virtual One-Day Course : 02/26/26
- Feb 26 – Why Today’s EHS Leaders Need AI More Than Ever: Achieving EHS Success with AI

American Society of Safety Professionals
IHMM is a member of the American Society of Safety Professionals and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.
ASSP News
- NIOSH Reinstatements: A Major Win for Worker Safety and Sustained Advocacy
- Cognitive Fatigue & Task Complexity: Ensuring Worker Safety in Construction & Engineering
- Episode 177: Providing Effective Training to Every Generation of the Workforce
- Why ISO 45001 is the Global Game-Changer for Every Safety Professional
- Episode 176: Working on the Night Shift – What Safety Pros Need to Know
- The Impact of Giving Back
ISO/PAS 45007:2026 Occupational health and safety management – Risks arising from climate change and climate change action – Guidance for organizations – soon to be published.
Abstract: This document gives guidance to organizations on planning for and addressing occupational health and safety (OH&S) risks arising from climate change and climate change action, including:
– OH&S risks which arise as a result of climate change adaptation efforts, including changing ways of working and work processes, and infrastructure upgrades;
– OH&S risks arising from climate change mitigation actions;
– OH&S opportunities arising from both climate change adaptation and mitigation actions.
This document is applicable to all organizations taking a systematic approach to addressing OH&S risks arising from climate change. It is applicable to organizations of all sizes, including small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
ASSP Webinars
- Jan 29 – Stand-Up for Standards: Ask the Chairs – Z16.1 Key Metrics That Drive Impact
- Feb 13 – Stand-Up for Standards: Understanding the Revised ANSI Z490.1 Training Standard
- Feb 19 – Integrating Z10 to Manage Occupational Health & Safety
- Feb 19 – Accident Investigation Techniques
- Feb 26 – Safety Management II
- Feb 26 – Enterprise Risk Management for Safety Professionals
- Feb 26 – ANSI/ASSP Z16: Using Safety Metrics to Drive Operational Excellence
- Feb 26 – Influential Leadership Skills
- Feb 26 – Risk Assessment and Management for Safety Professionals
- Feb 26 – Integrating ISO 45001 to Manage Occupational Health & Safety
- Feb 26 – Safety Management I
- Feb 26 – Corporate Safety Management

Coming Soon…
The Certified Professional
From the IHMM Foundation | Highlighting Our Commitment to Professional Development | Scholarships | Research | Affinity Programs | Networking |
IHMM and The IHMM Foundation
Check it out! The graphic to the left brings to life the powerful partnership between IHMM and the IHMM Foundation — a collaboration built to support YOU and every IHMM credential holder!
IHMM created the IHMM Foundation with one goal in mind: to empower and elevate its certificants. While IHMM delivers a wide range of prestigious professional credentials, the IHMM Foundation steps in with game-changing professional development programs designed to support both current certificants and those on the path to certification.
Together, they’re building a stronger, smarter, and more connected community of professionals. 🚀 Ready to take your career to the next level? This is where it all begins!
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