Solutions in Science 2025
At the 2025 Solutions in Science (SinS) Conference in Brighton, United Kingdom, Suvi Takala, Head of Unit: Chemistry, the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) and agency of the European Union (EU), delivered a comprehensive address on the central role of analytical science in chemical regulation. She urged deeper collaboration between scientists and regulators across Europe – inside and outside the EU – to ensure effective policy-making, particularly as the pace of chemical innovation continues to outstrip legacy testing methods.
Takala began by outlining ECHA’s expanding responsibilities since it was established in 2007 to implement the EU’s REACH Regulation (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals). The agency now operates within a framework determined by ten pieces of legislation, including those concerning biocides, industrial emissions, battery safety and nanomaterials, and is expected to play a key role in future regulations on both toys and medical devices.
Although the ECHA may issue binding decisions and advise the administrative arm of the EU, the European Commission, any enforcement can only be carried out at the national level of given member states. Takala noted that this continued division of responsibilities between the EU agency at the core and individual member states, makes it ever more essential to pursue harmonised analytical methods in order to ensure consistent implementation across the bloc as a whole.
With more than 600 staff, most of whom are scientists, ECHA operates four scientific committees and four expert groups that evaluate risks, assess socio-economic implications and provide technical advice. Takala emphasised that the cornerstone of chemical safety lies in the accurate characterisation of substances, which informs assessment of risk, exposure evaluation and further down the line, regulatory decisions. However, many of the analytical methods currently in use are becoming outdated. She warned that reliance on obsolete techniques could result either in undetected hazards or, on the other, with the application of the precautionary principle in overly cautious restrictions that impede innovation.
Takala argued that regulation must therefore protect both health while enabling progress. If novel analytical methods are not incorporated into legal frameworks, industry may lack the incentive to adopt safer alternatives by merely continuing to comply with long-understood testing practices. Over time, public confidence could be eroded if regulation is seen as becoming misaligned with current science.
She drew a distinction between general research and regulatory science; the latter being defined by its need to produce legally actionable conclusions from empirical data. Regulatory scientists must interpret results through the lens of legal mandates – a process that demands what she described as ‘scientists with legal brains’.
At ECHA, legal and scientific staff work together to ensure decisions are both technically robust and legally sound. Given that many regulatory questions lie at the frontier of scientific understanding, she encouraged the wider scientific community to support regulators in identifying which methods are suitable for standardisation and regulatory use.
Takala highlighted three key areas where analytical capacity remains insufficient:
She further identified three other areas where method development is urgent:
Takala described the regulatory policy cycle as a continuous process – beginning with the definition of objectives, passing through option evaluation, consultation and legislation, and requiring ongoing review and revision. She noted that legal texts define only general obligations; technical guidance, informed by regulatory science, is what allows legislation to be enforced with strong effect.
She reaffirmed ECHA’s commitment to replacing animal testing with validated alternatives but insisted that any method – including analytical tools – must first show that it offers equivalent protection before regulatory adoption.
Takala then described three initiatives through which ECHA is engaging with the research community:
She concluded by calling for regulation to be ‘co-produced’ by scientists, regulators, industry and the wider public. Europe’s future chemical safety, she said, depends on a collective responsibility, mutual understanding and ability to convert emerging scientific knowledge into enforceable and socially meaningful policy and legislation.
ILM Guide 2026/27