China RoHS 2
Directive MIIT
Order No 32, 2016
EU REACH
Regulation (EC)
No. 1907/2006
Current ECHA Candidate List: JUN 2018 (191)
Candidate List Declared Against: JAN 2018 (181)
Halogen Content
Solder Process
Capability
Not reviewed for solder process capability
Statement of
Compliance
Statement of Compliance pdf
Compliance
Documents
There may be Environmental Compliance related
documents on the DOCUMENTATION Tab
Disclaimer This information is provided based on reasonable
inquiry of our suppliers and represents our current
actual knowledge based on the information they
provided. This information is subject to change. The
part numbers that TE has identified as EU RoHS
compliant have a maximum concentration of 0.1% by
weight in homogenous materials for lead,
hexavalent chromium, mercury, PBB, PBDE, and
0.01% for cadmium, or qualify for an exemption to
these limits as defined in the Annexes of Directive
2011/65/EU (RoHS2). Finished electrical and
electronic equipment products will be CE marked as
required by Directive 2011/65/EU. Components may
not be CE marked. Additionally, the part numbers
that TE has identified as EU ELV compliant have a
maximum concentration of 0.1% by weight in
homogenous materials for lead, hexavalent
chromium, and mercury, and 0.01% for cadmium, or
qualify for an exemption to these limits as defined in
the Annexes of Directive 2000/53/EC (ELV).
Regarding the REACH Regulations, TE’s information
on SVHC in articles for this part number is still based
on the European Chemical Agency (ECHA)
‘Guidance on requirements for substances in
articles’(Version: 2, April 2011), applying the 0.1%
weight on weight concentration threshold at the
finished product level. TE is aware of the European
Court of Justice ruling of September 10th, 2015
also known as O5A (Once An Article Always An
Article) stating that, in case of ‘complex object’, the
threshold for a SVHC must be applied to both the
product as a whole and simultaneously to each of
the articles forming part of its composition. TE has
evaluated this ruling based on the new ECHA
“Guidance on requirements for substances in
articles” (June 2017, version 4.0) and will be
updating its statements accordingly in 2018.