Coloured ink for tattoos to be banned in EU from 4 January; all you need to know

The EU has said that the new rules will help protect people from a range of health problems including skin irritations to cancer

FP Trending January 03, 2022 15:03:21 IST
Coloured ink for tattoos to be banned in EU from 4 January; all you need to know

Use of coloured ink for tattooing to be prohibited in EU from 4 January. Wikimedia Commons/Ari Helminen

Coloured tattoo inks are set to be banned in the European Union from 4 January, 2022. Around 4,000 chemical substances used in the production of permanent make-up and coloured inks, will be outlawed from 4 January, according to The Independent.  

The rules also include “maximum concentration limits established either for groups of substances or for individual substances such as certain azodyes and carcinogenic aromatic amines, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), metals and methanol”, according to the bloc. The move comes into force as the EU seeks to protect its citizens from potentially harmful chemicals.

Any product that contains the newly controlled substances in greater concentrations than prescribed, will be banned from sale by the EU’s Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) legislation.

The new rules were approved a year ago, with the EU giving a 12-month transition period to tattoo artists and the make-up industry to alter its recipes.  Two shades, Pigment Green 7 and Pigment Blue 15:3 were given a 24-month grace period since they were difficult to obtain.

The bloc said that the new rules will help protect customers from a range of health problems from skin irritations to cancer. Some of the substances were already banned in products to be applied on top of the skin, according to The Metro.

The EU stated that the aim of the new rules is to make the colouring inks used in tattoos “safer”. Scientists have not yet come to a consensus about direct links between cancer and tattoo ink.

However, according to news reports, tattoo artists claim that suppliers have been slow to make any progress on alternative substances, making it difficult for customers to get coloured tattoos. Some have had to turn away customers since they are unable to predict when they will get good replacements for coloured inks.

According to The Independent, many tattoo artists are complaining that the new rules will dampen business. A petition has also been launched to “save” Pigment Green 7 and Pigment Blue 15:3. The petition has over 1,75,000 signatures till date.

Tattoo artists are also worried that the new rules will lead to a “lasting negative impact on the economic competitiveness of European tattooists and pigmenters vis-à-vis providers outside the EU”, and could seriously jeopardise the profession.

There are also concerns that many people would turn to “backyard artists”, who offer tattoos illegally, to fulfil their desire for coloured tattoos.

Read all the Latest News, Trending News, Cricket News, Bollywood News,
India News and Entertainment News here. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Updated Date:

also read

India relations set to climb new heights as new coalition assumes charge in Germany
World

India relations set to climb new heights as new coalition assumes charge in Germany

The next round of the India-Germany inter-governmental consultations will be a good occasion for the leadership of the two countries to exchange views on global matters and add strategic substance

Chile's tattooed president-elect Gabriel Boric honours homeland in ink
World

Chile's tattooed president-elect Gabriel Boric honours homeland in ink

Since his days as a student protest leader, Boric has made a career of flouting conventions. He shunned the traditional suit and tie when he was elected to Congress in 2014 and instead wore rock band T-shirts, jeans, drawing the ire of traditionalists

New Zealand journalist becomes first person with Māori face tattoo to anchor primetime news
World

New Zealand journalist becomes first person with Māori face tattoo to anchor primetime news

The 37-year-old newsreader explained that she got the ethnic tattoo in 2017 after a DNA test results revealed that she was 100 percent Māori.