RoHS Compliant
Updated 10 restricted substances / 22-JUL-2019
RoHS stands for Restriction of Hazardous Substances, and impacts the entire electronics
industry and many electrical products as well. The original RoHS, also known as Directive
2002/95/EC, originated in the European Union in 2002 and restricts the use of six hazardous
materials found in electrical and electronic products. All applicable products in the EU market
since July 1, 2006 must pass RoHS compliance.
Directive 2011/65/EU was published in 2011 by the EU, which is known as RoHS-Recast
or RoHS 2. RoHS 2 includes a CE-marking directive, with RoHS compliance now being
required for CE marking of products. RoHS 2 also added Categories 8 and 9, and has additional
compliance recordkeeping requirements.
Directive 2015/863 is known as RoHS 3. RoHS 3 adds four additional restricted substances
(phthalates) to the list of six.
Any business that sells applicable electrical or electronic products, equipment,
sub-assemblies, cables, components, or spare parts directly to RoHS-directed countries, or
sells to resellers, distributors or integrators that in turn sell products to these countries, is
impacted if they utilize any of the restricted 10 substances.
With the rapid spread of digitization, the world's production of electrical and electronic
devices is exploding. Besides mobile devices, think about the coming wave of IoT, smart home
assistants, robots, drones, 3D printers, and home medical devices to all corners of the planet...
they are all regulated under RoHS.
EU RoHS specifies maximum levels for the following 10 restricted substances. The first
six applied to the original RoHS while the last four were added under RoHS 3, which took
effect July 22, 2019.