On 17 January 2026, Government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam released Decree 26/2026/ND-CP elaborates Vietnam's Law on Chemicals (No. 69/2025/QH15), detailing management of chemical activities and dangerous chemicals in products/goods, aligned with GHS and Chemical Weapons Convention. Effective immediately (storage from July 1, 2026), it repeals prior decrees and sets transitional compliance by 2027.
Chapter I (General Provisions): Article 1 scopes toxic criteria (GHS Cat. 1 hazards), production/trade requirements, import/export, storage certificates, exemptions, new registrations, info protection, digital tools, declarations. Article 2 defines "schedule chemical" (CWC-listed per Decree 24/2026/ND-CP), CAS identifiers, and traceability. Article 3 assigns roles: Industry & Trade leads database/safety; sector ministries (Health, Agriculture) handle specifics; provinces enforce locally - key for coordinated oversight.
Chapter II (Activities Management): Articles 4-5 mandate legal setup, hazard signage, emergency plans/equipment, and qualified staff for production/trade. Article 6 requires import declarations via Single Window (exempt 10kg). Sections cover conditional/special/restricted chemicals (Articles 7-18: eligibility, licenses 5-12 months, purpose declarations); storage certificates (Articles 19-20: 5-year validity); exemptions (0.1% concentrations, e.g., paints); revocations (10 days).
Chapter III (Registration): Articles 23-25 outline 90-day new chemical appraisals (recognising ECHA/TSCA), 5-year monitoring - vital for innovation/safety.
Chapter IV (Dangerous Chemicals): Articles 28-32 require production controls, pre-market declarations (content/hazards on labels/portals) - enhances transparency.
Chapter V (Implementation): Articles 26-27 protect secrets, drive digital transformation (electronic certs, annual reports by Feb 15).
Critical Analysis: Strengths include GHS/CWC integration and digital traceability for risk reduction/export compliance. Weaknesses: Burdensome procedures/fees may hinder SMEs; enforcement varies provincially, risking gaps. Implications: Bolsters the sustainable chemical sector but needs SME support/training for efficacy.